We are offering an opportunity for an enthusiastic and motivated individual to step into the role of Band 4 Discharge Co-Ordinator within our Community Access Team. This is an excellent opportunity for anyone looking to broaden their discharge planning experience. As Discharge Co-Ordinator you will be expected to provide essential data, coordination and administrative support to multidisciplinary health and social care teams within acute and community hospital settings. This role supports the timely and efficient transfer of patients from acute hospitals to community care environments. The Discharge Co-Ordinator will assist in delivering high-quality patient care by assessing, planning, and evaluating discharge pathways, ensuring safe transitions to the next level of care.
The working hours for the service are from 8AM to 5PM Monday to Friday and from 8AM to 4PM on Saturday and Sunday.
You will play a key part in supporting the safe and timely transfer of patients to intermediate care settings, including inpatient units and care homes. You will be responsible for carrying out thorough patient assessments independently, while seeking input from senior qualified staff members and multidisciplinary colleagues when appropriate to ensure high-quality, person-centred care. Additionally, you will assist with a range of administrative tasks, including handling telephone enquiries and liaising with health and social care professionals to manage and process referrals efficiently.
The role is based in the Integrated Discharge Hub at Norfolk and Norwich Hospital.
Please note that parking is not available on site at Norfolk and Norwich Hospital.
This is an exciting opportunity for a Discharge Co-Ordinator to join a fast-paced setting.
Apply now to join an organisation that has been awarded an 'Outstanding' rating by the Care Quality Commission (CQC), the highest possible rating and the first stand-alone NHS community trust in the country to be awarded the title.
Please find out more information about working for our organisation here:
https://heyzine.com/flip-book/2565ae62eb.html
Please note, the selection processes at Norfolk Community Health and Care NHS Trust are in place to ensure we recruit candidates with the right values and skills, please be advised that the use of AI in applications are monitored. We remain watchful of candidates who misuse these tools to generate an application that doesn’t accurately reflect their skills.
Clinical duties
1. To prepare for, carry out and monitor assessments in specified clinical areas, and discharge in line with predetermined department protocols.
2. To modify and progress intervention using own clinical reasoning, notifying a qualified practitioner accordingly.
3. To monitor patients and promptly alert a qualified practitioner when there are unexpected changes.
4. To demonstrate problem solving, and contribute to the solution, working with colleagues.
5. To plan and prioritise own assessments to delegated patients and ensure patient held paper and electronic records are completed on daily basis.
6. To allocate and monitor patients from a waiting list for community beds in line with predetermined department protocols.
7. To share responsibility for indirect patient contact tasks, such as, answering telephones, arranging appointments, processing referrals and inputting activity data.
Information and Data Co-ordination
1. To receive, breakdown, co-ordinate data and identify appropriate discharge pathways or interventions. To attend daily meetings with Multi-Disciplinary Team members and follow up on actions and escalate as required.
2. To maintain accurate data to provide up-to-date information and report to any of the multi-disciplinary team about any individual to ease processes and communication.
Discharge Co-Ordination
1. To have an up-to-date knowledge of the multidisciplinary management of the patient and discharge plan of all patients. If a clear plan cannot be identified in the medical record, to contact relevant clinicians for clarification.
2. To have an understanding of clinical conditions and terminology.
3. To independently gather and collate information from the medical notes, patients and multi-disciplinary team colleagues to enable a clear plan for a discharge pathway.
4. To facilitate effective communication and coordination of care between all multidisciplinary team members involved with each patient.
5. To take community referrals within agreed format/process and act as a point of contact for health and social care professionals.
6. To actively communicate with services to enable appropriate and timely discharges and raise issues impacting upon delays with managers.
7. To refer to and redirect to other agencies or individuals for those whose needs might appropriately be met elsewhere and anticipate potential delays and take action to prevent them.
8. To monitor progress against the discharge plan and to be aware of changes to the original plan. Inform and liaise with clinical and non-clinical staff as appropriate.
9. To act as a resource person and assist other staff with information on available resources, relevant organisations to be approached.
10. To provide and receive sensitive information about difficult or complex matters respecting confidentiality at all times including communicating effectively and appropriately with patients, carers and families where there may be barriers to understanding.
11. To manage and prioritise own workload without direct supervision.
12. To ensure paper and electronic records are completed on daily basis in a contemporaneous and accurate manner in line with legal and departmental requirements.
13. To liaise with members of the multidisciplinary team to ensure discharge arrangements are completed in a timely manner eg Ensure TTOs are prescribed, requested and obtained before transport arrives.
14. To work in accordance with policies/procedures and standing operating procedures and to suggest improvements to these and service ways of working.