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Purpose

– The purpose of this paper is to demonstrate that nurse led discharge (NLD) could improve the efficiency of simple discharges from a short stay surgical ward without compromising patient safety.

Design/methodology/approach

– A protocol for NLD was designed and implemented. Introduction of the protocol was audited and re-audited prospectively.

Findings

– Introduction of the nurse led discharge protocol significantly reduced the rate of delayed discharge (p>0.001). The protocol successfully identified all patients for whom a NLD would be inappropriate and no patients discharged by the nursing team were re-admitted.

Research limitations/implications

– No formal measure of staff and patient satisfaction with the new protocol was performed.

Practical implications

– The nursing team are now able to more effectively manage patient flow through the short stay surgical ward. Mismatch between demand for beds and capacity has reduced.

Social implications

– Patient experience has been improved by the release of time to care for our nurses and the elimination of unnecessary delay in discharge.

Originality/value

– Formal protocol driven NLD can be a safe way of improving efficiency in patient flow. This pattern of discharge could be applied in many hospital systems.

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