Sept. 19, 2025
When our members receive inpatient hospital care, it’s important for hospital care teams to share information with primary care providers to coordinate care after discharge. Hospital discharge summaries can help our members transition from inpatient care, according to the American College of Physicians and others. Care coordination and planning may in turn help enhance patient safety, improve outcomes and reduce the chances of hospital readmissions.
If you provide care to our members during or after a hospital discharge, consider the following tips to support care coordination.
For hospital care teams
Give PCPs timely access to hospital discharge summaries. Discharge summaries should include information on:
For PCPs
How we can help
As part of our provider satisfaction survey, we track responses from PCPs and specialists about the timely sharing of hospital discharge summaries. The survey results help us identify opportunities to improve care coordination.
The above material is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for the independent medical judgment of a physician or other health care provider. Physicians and other health care providers are encouraged to use their own medical judgment based upon all available information and the condition of the patient in determining the appropriate course of treatment. References to other third-party sources or organizations are not a representation, warranty or endorsement of such organization. The fact that a service or treatment is described in this material, is not a guarantee that the service or treatment is a covered benefit and members should refer to their certificate of coverage for more details, including benefits, limitations and exclusions. Regardless of benefits, the final decision about any service or treatment is between the member and their health care provider.