PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Tara Kiran AU - David Wells AU - Karen Okrainec AU - Carol Kennedy AU - Kimberly Devotta AU - Gracia Mabaya AU - Lacey Phillips AU - Amy Lang AU - Pat O’Campo TI - Patient and caregiver experience in the transition from hospital to home — brainstorming results from group concept mapping: a patient-oriented study AID - 10.9778/cmajo.20190009 DP - 2020 Jan 01 TA - CMAJ Open PG - E121--E133 VI - 8 IP - 1 4099 - http://www.cmajopen.ca/content/8/1/E121.short 4100 - http://www.cmajopen.ca/content/8/1/E121.full SO - CMAJ2020 Jan 01; 8 AB - Background: Improving the quality of care for patients who return home after a hospital stay is an international priority; however, few jurisdictions have engaged broadly with patients and caregivers to understand what most affects their experience transitioning home. We performed Ontario-wide group concept mapping, beginning with a brainstorming phase, to understand patient and caregiver priorities in the transition.Methods: We used group concept mapping to engage patients and caregivers who had lived experience transitioning from hospital to home in Ontario in the previous 3 years. We report on the first phase, brainstorming, conducted over 10 weeks beginning Jan. 11, 2018 via an online survey or facilitated group discussion. Participants responded to a single focal prompt: “When leaving the hospital for home, some thing(s) that affected the experience were: ____.” The study team identified recurrent concepts and overarching themes. Patients and caregivers informed the study design, recruitment and data interpretation.Results: In all, 665 people (263 patients [39.5%], 352 caregivers [52.9%] and 50 people who were both patient and caregiver [7.5%]) participated in brainstorming online, and 71 people participated in 1 of 8 group discussions. Participants identified 6 key areas affecting their experience of transition from hospital to home: home and community care, the discharge process, medical follow-up after discharge, medications, patient and caregiver education, and the kindness and caring of the health care team in hospital. Most notable were challenges with the timeliness, sufficiency, reliability and consistency of publicly funded home care services.Interpretation: Patients and caregivers from across Ontario noted a range of issues affecting their experience transitioning from hospital to home, particularly the quality and sufficiency of publicly funded home care. Our findings will be used to inform a provincial quality standard on the transition from hospital to home.