Hospital discharge nurse reviewing paperwork with a senior patient

The phone call you’ve been dreading has already happened. Your parent is in the hospital — maybe a fall, a cardiac event, a bout of pneumonia — and the attending physician has just used a phrase that changes your week: “We’re thinking about sending her home tomorrow.” For most families, that sentence arrives without warning and kicks off a scramble that affects how well your parent recovers for the next 30 days.

Hospital discharge planning is one of the highest-leverage things a caregiver can get right. CMS’s Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program data shows roughly 15–18% of Medicare patients are readmitted within 30 days of a hospitalization, and the majority of those readmissions trace back to problems that started in the first 72 hours at home — a missed medication, a new prescription that conflicted with an old one, a bathroom with no grab bar, or a follow-up appointment that got scheduled but never attended. This guide is how to get those first 72 hours right.

What you’ll learn

Your discharge-planning playbook

  • Your legal rights under the 2019 CMS Discharge Planning Final Rule (42 CFR § 482.43) — what the hospital has to give you, in writing
  • The 7-item checklist to leave the discharge meeting with (most families leave with 2 of the 7)
  • A medication-reconciliation walk-through — and why the pharmacist is your single highest-value phone call
  • How to plan the ride home before discharge morning, including the Medicare coverage gap most families don’t know about
  • A 15-minute home safety sweep based on the CDC STEADI checklist, ranked by what actually prevents falls
  • Essex County specifics: Beverly Hospital, Salem Hospital, Anna Jaques, Lahey — who to ask for, which home-health agency is in-network
1 in 5
Medicare beneficiaries is readmitted to the hospital within 30 days of discharge, per CMS. The majority of those readmissions are tied to preventable issues in the first 72 hours home — medications, mobility, missed follow-ups.

Know your legal rights: the 2019 CMS Discharge Planning Rule

In 2019 CMS finalized the Discharge Planning Final Rule, which strengthened the obligations hospitals have to you as a family caregiver. Under 42 CFR § 482.43, any Medicare-participating hospital must:

In practice, you often have to ask to have these obligations honored. Federal law gives you the right — but the default workflow in a busy hospital is to push paperwork at you at 11 a.m. on discharge morning and wave goodbye. The moment you hear “going home soon,” ask for a formal discharge planning meeting.

The 7-item discharge-meeting checklist

Nurse helping elderly patient leave hospital in a wheelchair
Every hospital has a discharge planner or case manager — usually a nurse or social worker. Request a formal meeting; federal law requires it, but you often have to ask.

Bring a notebook. Don’t leave the meeting without all seven of these:

Reconcile the medications before you leave — and ask for the pharmacist

Medication errors are the single biggest preventable cause of readmissions. A 2021 review in Frontiers in Pharmacology found that medication-related problems account for a meaningful share of readmissions within 30 days of discharge, and a 2024 meta-analysis showed pharmacist-led medication reconciliation at discharge significantly reduces medication errors.

Before your parent signs the discharge papers, put the new hospital medication list next to the medication list from home and go through each one. Are there duplicates under different names? Is the blood thinner dose the same? Is there a new drug that interacts with something they were already on? If anything is unclear, ask the nurse to page the hospital pharmacist — this is a normal request, and pharmacists are generally happy to do it.

Get the first round of new prescriptions filled at the hospital pharmacy if possible, rather than discovering at 9 p.m. that the neighborhood pharmacy doesn’t stock a particular cardiac medication. Essex County pharmacies vary widely in what they keep on hand.

“The most common regret I hear from caregivers isn’t ‘we picked the wrong rehab’ — it’s ‘we didn’t ask enough questions on discharge morning and we were back in the ER four days later.’”

— Paraphrased from Family Caregiver Alliance and public caregiver forums

Plan the ride home before discharge morning

Wheelchair-accessible NEMT van ready for a hospital discharge transfer
A trained NEMT driver can handle the wheelchair transfer properly and get your parent from the discharge entrance to their couch without putting weight on a healing surgical site.

This is where families most often underestimate what’s involved. A parent leaving the hospital after a few days of bed rest is weaker than they were when they went in. They may have a new walker they haven’t learned to use, an IV site that needs care, or incision pain that makes getting in and out of a sedan difficult. Trying to transfer a deconditioned parent from a hospital wheelchair into a family SUV in a drop-off lane, with cars honking behind you, is one of the most common places a post-discharge fall happens.

Non-emergency medical transportation solves this. A trained NEMT driver can handle the wheelchair transfer properly, accommodate equipment the hospital is sending home, and get your parent from the discharge entrance to their couch without putting weight on a healing surgical site. For wheelchair patients, it’s often the only safe option other than an ambulance — which Medicare will not cover for non-emergency transport.

Book the ride the day before discharge, not the morning of. Hospital discharge times slip — your parent might be told “by 11 a.m.” and actually leave at 3 p.m. A good NEMT provider understands this and builds in flexibility.

72 hrs
The first 72 hours after discharge are when the vast majority of preventable readmissions start — a missed med, a fall in a dark hallway, a follow-up nobody scheduled.

The 15-minute home safety sweep

While your parent is still in the hospital, go to their home with fresh eyes. Use the CDC STEADI Check for Safety checklist as your backbone. Ranked by what actually prevents falls:

Nail down the first follow-up appointment — and the ride to it

Home health worker helping a senior at home after hospital discharge
Research on care transitions consistently shows that a follow-up visit within 7–14 days of discharge dramatically reduces readmissions.

Research on care transitions, going back to Eric Coleman’s original Care Transitions Measure, consistently shows that a follow-up visit with the primary care physician or specialist within 7–14 days of discharge reduces readmissions substantially. Don’t leave the hospital without at least the first one on the calendar, and don’t assume your parent will make it there on their own. A standing NEMT arrangement for post-discharge follow-ups is one of the highest-value things a caregiver can set up in the week after discharge.

If your parent has a Medicare Advantage plan, check the Evidence of Coverage — many Massachusetts MA plans now include a supplemental transportation benefit, typically counted as one-way trips (so a round-trip doctor visit uses 2 rides of your annual allotment). If your parent has MassHealth, a PT-1 transportation authorization can be completed by their discharging physician before they leave the hospital.

Essex County playbook: which hospital, who to call, what to ask

Local home health options most commonly used in Essex County discharges include VNA Care, Beth Israel Lahey Health at Home, Mass General Brigham Home Care, and SeniorCare Inc. (the Area Agency on Aging). Ask for two referrals if possible, so you can compare scheduling availability.

Take care of yourself, too

Caregiver burnout in the two weeks after a parent’s hospital discharge is real and predictable. The adult child who tries to do everything — drive to appointments, manage medications, cook, and hold down a full-time job — is the one who ends up sick two weeks later. AARP’s 2025 Caregiving in the US data now puts the family caregiver count at 63 million Americans, averaging 27 hours of unpaid care per week, and the single fastest-growing piece of that workload is transportation in the post-discharge window.

Delegating the transportation piece of this equation is not a luxury. It’s how you stay healthy enough to be the caregiver your parent actually needs — not just the week of discharge, but the month and year after.

Need a ride you can count on?

Harmony Rides provides door-through-door non-emergency medical transportation across Essex County — with trained drivers, wheelchair-accessible vehicles, and standing weekly bookings for dialysis, infusion, PT, and post-discharge follow-ups.

Book a ride or get a quote →
Sources & Further Reading
  1. CMS — Hospital Readmissions Reduction Program (HRRP)
  2. Federal Register — 2019 CMS Discharge Planning Final Rule
  3. CMS — Discharge Planning Rule Fact Sheet
  4. 42 CFR § 482.43 — Condition of Participation: Discharge Planning (Cornell Law)
  5. CDC STEADI — Best Practices for Inpatient Fall Prevention After Discharge
  6. CDC STEADI — Home Fall Prevention Checklist for Older Adults
  7. Frontiers in Pharmacology (2021) — Medication-Related Hospital Readmissions Within 30 Days of Discharge
  8. Frontiers in Pharmacology (2024) — Pharmacist-Led Medication Reconciliation on Errors at Discharge
  9. AARP & National Alliance for Caregiving — Caregiving in the US 2025
  10. Family Caregiver Alliance — Hospital Discharge Planning: A Guide for Families
  11. Mass.gov — How to Complete and Submit the PT-1 Online
  12. CMS — 3-Item Care Transition Measure (CTM-3)