Considerations for Transfer

Inter-hospital transports can result in adverse patient events, so it’s up to the transferring physician to ensure safe passage for the patient.

Here are some items to consider when transferring a critically ill patient:

  •      Give a good handoff: Have a clear discussion with the receiving physician (or physicians if more than one if additional specialty is required).  This ensures continuity of care and ideally should confirm the receiving hospital has the services required to care for the patient.
  •      Predict Problems: Anticipate possible emergencies and, if able, proactively intervene to prevent decompensation (e.g., intubation, central venous access, volume resuscitation, etc.)
  •      Stabilize: Fix as many physiologic derangement as possible (e.g., hypoxia, hypercarbia, academia, etc.)
  •      Be accessible: Consider providing your phone number to the transport team so they can call for continued consultation during transport.
  •      Send records: Important records help to pick up care where it was left off at the transporting hospital (e.g., progress notes, discharge summaries, medication records, radiographs, healthcare proxy information, family contact information, etc.)

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