Background
The term “discharge” is defined as a transfer from one state or place to another [
10]. A discharge transition period commonly begins prior to discharge and extends into the post-discharge period [
11]. They have been identified as periods of heightened vulnerability for older adults [
8]. In a previous study [
5], 45.8% of the discharged older adults reported experiencing significant problems with managing their health care, including the performance of tasks associated with their health and adherence to ongoing care plans.
Hip fractures require particularly long periods to recover, and dependence is inevitable during a discharge transition [
12]. The major transitional difficulties that older adults face after hip fractures are physical function limitations, and pain and its management [
13]. Physical performance, including walking and ADL, is an essential prerequisite for older adults dwelling in a community environment [
14]. Difficulties in physical performance in their life situations typically result in most older adults with various underlying diseases being transferred to other care settings [
3,
13,
15,
16]. They perceive problems in the quality of care due to lack of a communication system between care settings [
17], which causes limited continuous care [
8]. Transitional care interventions, which include discharge planning and education, post-discharge follow-up, and care coordination, provided by healthcare providers for older patients have been widely implemented to ensure continuity of care. In a systematic evidence review [
18], these interventions were shown to be effective in lowering mortality, emergency department visits, readmission rate and days.
Understanding older adults’ own views of their situation from the time of discharge transition is likely to be connected with their assessment of their care needs. Meleis’ transition theory [
10], as a guiding framework, may provide a systematic understanding of their experiences during discharge transition. In particular, based on the transition theory [
10], an in-depth understanding of transitional conditions facilitating or inhibiting the discharge transition would affect the quality of nursing therapeutics for a healthy transition. The transitional conditions include individual conditions, such as readiness and knowledge, and environmental conditions, such as family or healthcare providers’ support [
10]. Qualitative approaches are appropriate to fully understand the experience of discharge transition from the perspective of older adults [
19,
20]. Some previous qualitative studies related to older adults with hip fracture surgery have described the experience of early discharge [
21], pain and rehabilitation after discharge [
16], and recovery after hip fracture surgery [
12,
20,
22]. To the best of our knowledge, only a few studies have described older adults’ discharge transition experiences in Korea.
There are also differences between Eastern and Western health care systems for care after hip fracture surgery. In South Korea, surgical hospitals provide postoperative care and rehabilitation during short hospitalization [
6], while in the United States, patients are systematically transferred to post-acute care facilities for rehabilitation after discharge from surgical hospitals [
23]. In addition to the differences in the health care systems, the recovery experiences of older adults after hip fracture surgery in Asia will differ from those in the Western countries, given that in the family-oriented Asian cultures, the family has the most influence on the patient’s life [
24,
25]. In a study conducted in Taiwan [
26], it was reported that emotional support predicted physical function and health-related quality of life of older adults living with extended family members after hip fracture surgery. Strong bonds among family members may enhance the significance of emotional support for recovery.
Owing to the rapid growth of the older population, the annual incidence of hip fractures in Korea is approximately 82,550 cases, and older adults accounted for 64,366 (78%) of these cases [
27]. Therefore, there is an urgent need to explore the experiences of older adults after hip fracture surgery. The purpose of this study was to describe older adults’ experiences and perceptions of their transitional conditions during their discharge transitions after hip fracture surgery in South Korea.
Discussion
The purpose of this study was to clarify older women’s discharge transition experiences after hip fracture surgery. We identified four main themes—challenge of discharge transition, physical and psychological distress against recovery, dependent compliance, and walking for things they took for granted. This study is significant as it elucidates patients’ distinct experiences, which inform future discharge transition programs.
First, the challenges of their discharge transition included three categories—unprepared discharge, transfer into other care settings, and eagerness for recovery. Consistent with a prior study [
15], most older women believed that their state was unstable and wanted to stay longer in the surgery hospital. Short hospitalization as a measure for cost-saving is currently the rule rather than the exception. However, short hospitalization within 10 days for patients with hip fracture is associated with higher one-year mortality after discharge in South Korea [
6]. In addition, postoperative care and rehabilitation at surgical hospitals during short hospitalization is unlikely to be sufficient to recover. In this study, most participants were transferred to long-care and rehabilitation hospitals after discharge; this finding was compared with a study [
6] that most older adults were transferred to home or other non-medical settings. However, older patients transferred to long-care hospitals could not receive rehabilitation because long-care facilities focus more on patient safety rather than care to promote physical function [
32]. Limited continuous care makes it difficult for older women’s needs to be met [
11] and restricted rehabilitative care causes higher morbidity and mortality [
33].
To facilitate safe discharge transition, communication and collaboration with healthcare professionals and ensuring adequate care settings are important roles in nursing [
17,
34]. In addition, in a previous study [
35], nurse-led rehabilitative practices were reported to reduce functional decline for older adults that have undergone hip fracture surgery. Thus, it is necessary for nurses to not only to recognize the importance of rehabilitative care but also establish rehabilitative strategies. The current finding that some older women struggled to recover functions such as exercising and eating was consistent with a previous study [
12], which was indicated that older adults began to plan for their recoveries immediately after hip fracture surgeries because regaining independence was the most important issue in their daily lives [
12].
As a second theme, physical and psychological distress against recovery was indicated. Older women with underlying diseases were in a frail physical state and were malnourished owing to poor appetite, digestion, and limited diet due to their underlying diseases, even though they recognized the importance of food intake [
36]. The frailty likely made their recovery more difficult. Hip fracture in older adults reflects the loss of skeletal strength from osteoporosis [
3], and rate of occurrence is higher for older women than for older men [
37]. Osteoporosis, which most older adults with hip fracture have, is closely correlated with sarcopenia. The combination of osteoporosis and sarcopenia may cause hip fracture [
38,
39]. Thus, interventions for sarcopenia as well as osteoporosis are essential for improving the frail physical states of older adults, including exercise, nutritional support, and pharmacological treatments [
38,
39].
Further, frail physical state caused psychological distress including loss of confidence and frustration. This was consistent with a previous study [
40], which demonstrated that frailty was the most important prognostic factor for depression and anxiety in patients with hip fracture. Psychological distress plays a major role in interfering with treatment after hip fracture [
40,
41]. To overcome discharge transition instability, not only physical, but also psychological support may prove helpful. According to a previous study [
42], older women living alone in Japan showed lower risk of psychological distress when they had relationships with other people, including family. Relationships with family for older women after hip fracture surgery are connected with the third theme.
The third theme, dependent compliance, refers to absolute trust in healthcare providers, indispensable support from the family, and passive participation in care. The result regarding absolute trust in healthcare providers was similar to that of a previous study [
12] in which older adults expressed their need to feel supported by healthcare providers. Older women also depended entirely on family members, likely because of the Korean family-centered culture [
43] and their limited social interaction [
21], although some had home-visit care services during limited hours in their home.
Older women were rather passive participants in their own care. They were either partly or not at all involved in the planning of their treatment and recovery because managing their own illnesses was complex and challenging [
8]. In Eastern cultures, physicians often tend to explain care plans to the family rather than individual patients [
43]. In this study, older women wanted to feel supported and at the same time found it difficult to participate in their own care. Feeling supported is likely to be achieved when nurses invite older women to participate in their care [
8,
43]. Family involvement is also important in family-oriented cultures [
42,
43]. Thus, inviting the patients (older women in this case) and their families to participate in the formers’ postoperative care should be considered at the discharge transition stage in South Korea.
The final theme was walking for things they took for granted. The purpose of walking during recovery was to perform simple daily chores. This is consistent with a previous study demonstrating that an essential requirement for daily functioning is recovery walking [
44]. Their expectations for walking differed according to their ambulation states. According to past studies, the walking abilities of older women after their hip fracture surgeries was affected by various factors: underlying diseases [
45,
46], pre-fracture mobility [
45,
46], age [
46], and health status [
47], which is similar with the finding of this study.
In addition to the physical and psychological distress mentioned above, in this study, severe pain and fear of falling were found to act as direct factors affecting walking ability. Pain is well recognized to be a major barrier for early recovery and should thus be treated as soon as possible [
48]. However, following hip fracture surgery, older adults are often not actively treated for pain during their hospitalization because of the difficulty of assessment and concerns regarding drug complications [
49]. Tailored pain management is needed for safe and adequate pain relief [
48,
49], considering that prolonged pain was independently associated with a catastrophic decline in walking recovery [
44].
Older women also complained of fear of falling at the onset of the recovery period. A previous study [
50] reported that the fear of falling was the primary constraint in the poorest ADL group and instrumental ADL group. Older adults continued to complain of fear of falling even 3–6 months after hip fracture surgery [
50], and after completion of a 4–6 weeks rehabilitation program [
51]. Fear of falling was also more frequent in women than in men [
52]. Considering that fear of falling is a factor that hinders walking ability from the onset, assessments and interventions to reduce fear of falling should be initiated as soon as possible after surgery.
In this study, most participants were immobile both indoors and outdoors during the discharge transition periods even though they were mobile before their fractures. According to a study [
3], most older adults have difficulty walking at discharge after hip fracture surgery and their functioning does not return to the pre-fracture state even 1 year after surgery [
9]. Delayed partial weight bearing after surgery has been reported to predict walking failure after hip fracture surgery [
45]. For effective physical rehabilitation including partial weight bearing at the earliest possible time, nursing needs to collaborate and coordinate with interdisciplinary personnel [
17,
34].
Limitations
This study had several limitations. First, the sample was recruited from a tertiary teaching hospital in Korea using convenience sampling; thus, our results may not be generalizable. Further study can investigate other differences in older women treated in non-tertiary hospitals. Second, all older adults in our study were women. Although hip fractures caused by simple falls are four times more common in women than in men [
3], it is necessary to examine whether gender differences exist in their discharge transition experiences after hip fracture surgery. Third, our sample size was small. Moreover, three of the selected participants could not participate after discharge, as one of them passed away and the other two could not be reached. This variance may have affected the results. Lastly, our findings cannot be extended to countries with different healthcare systems and cultures.
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