Hospital discharge and medications: 5 questions to ask your doctor

Keep yourself safe and healthy at home with these tips.

younger woman hugging older woman

Although being discharged from the hospital is an important first step toward recovery, most patients will need to continue to manage their health in the days, and weeks, following hospitalization—namely when it comes to medications.

Unfortunately, many hospital patients aren’t entirely sure what medicines to take when they get home, or how to take them. A study from the Pharmacy and Therapeutics and Quality Assurance committees found that up to 73 percent of older adults failed to use at least one medication according to their doctor’s advice. Another study from the journal PLOS One found that 28 percent of discharged patients didn’t properly take their medications within seven days of leaving the hospital, while another 24 percent failed to keep up on their medications within 30 days of discharge.

A lack of knowledge surrounding medications post-discharge can lead to avoidable setbacks, health complications, and readmission, no matter the reason for a patient’s hospitalization. Not having the right list of medicine when leaving the hospital is a major cause of complications after your release.

Help keep yourself safe and healthy at home by asking your medical team the following critical questions:

  1. Do I need to take any new medicines?
  2. Are there particular directions for each medicine, including if I should take it with or without food, in the morning or evening, etc.? 
  3. Which of my old medicines should I keep taking?
  4. Which of my old medicines should I stop taking?
  5. Do the doses of any of my medicines change?

Remember to talk to your local pharmacist when filling your prescriptions. Talk with your personal doctor and their nurses during your doctor’s follow-up visit as well. They’re part of your care team and can answer any questions you have.