Creates procedure-specific discharge instructions with activity restrictions, wound care, and return precautions. Use when writing post-surgical discharge instructions, creating patient education materials, or documenting surgical aftercare.
Creates procedure-specific discharge instructions with activity restrictions, wound care, and return precautions.
Surgical discharge instructions are the primary tool patients use to manage their recovery at home. CMS Conditions of Participation require documented discharge instructions, and HCAHPS survey questions directly assess whether patients received understandable discharge information. Poor discharge instructions contribute to the 5-15% 30-day surgical readmission rate — the most common preventable causes of readmission (wound complications, dehydration, uncontrolled pain, medication non-adherence) are all addressable through clear, specific discharge education.
Joint Commission standard PC.04.01.05 requires that discharge instructions include the reason for hospitalization, current medications, activity restrictions, diet, follow-up appointments, and return precautions. Generic, one-size-fits-all instructions are insufficient — patients who receive procedure-specific instructions with concrete parameters (e.g., "no lifting over 10 pounds for 4 weeks") have significantly better comprehension and lower complication rates than those who receive vague advice ("take it easy"). This skill produces procedure-specific, patient-centered discharge instructions at an appropriate health literacy level.
Provide the essential reference information at the top of the document:
DISCHARGE INSTRUCTIONS
Patient Name: _______________
Date of Surgery: _______________
Procedure Performed: _______________
Surgeon: _______________
Surgeon Office Phone: _______________
Follow-Up Appointment: _______________ at _______________
IF YOU HAVE AN EMERGENCY, CALL 911 OR GO TO THE NEAREST EMERGENCY ROOM.
For non-urgent questions during business hours, call: _______________
For after-hours urgent concerns, call: _______________
Write concrete, measurable restrictions. Avoid vague instructions like "take it easy" or "as tolerated."
| Procedure Category | Lifting Limit | Driving | Return to Work (desk) | Return to Work (physical) | Exercise |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Laparoscopic abdominal | <10 lbs x 2 weeks | When off opioids x 24h, typically 5-7 days | 1-2 weeks | 4-6 weeks | Walking immediately; full activity 4 weeks |
| Open abdominal (midline) | <10 lbs x 6 weeks | When off opioids, typically 2-3 weeks | 2-4 weeks | 6-8 weeks | Walking immediately; full activity 6-8 weeks |
| Hernia repair | <15 lbs x 4 weeks | 5-7 days | 1-2 weeks | 4-6 weeks | Walking immediately; no straining 6 weeks |
| Breast surgery | <5 lbs x 2 weeks affected arm | 5-7 days | 1-2 weeks | 4 weeks | No upper body exercise 4 weeks |
| Thyroid/neck | <10 lbs x 2 weeks | 3-5 days | 1 week | 2-4 weeks | Walking immediately; no straining 2 weeks |
Standard activity language:
Write clear, stepwise instructions:
Write medication instructions in plain language:
For each medication, state:
List home medications that were held perioperatively and the restart date:
Write a clear, specific list. Bold the action items:
Call the surgeon's office (during business hours) if you have:
Go to the Emergency Room or call 911 immediately if you have: