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Hospital & Recovery

Coming Home After a Hospital Stay

Reviewed by a Caring Companions Care Coordinator · Last updated July 2026 · About 6 minute read

The first 72 hours home from the hospital carry the highest risk of complications or a return trip to the ER. A little preparation goes a long way.

Before discharge: questions to ask

Ask the discharge planner directly: What follow-up appointments are needed, and when? What symptoms mean we should call the doctor versus go to the ER? What changed about the medication list? Is any equipment (walker, shower chair) needed at home?

The 72-hour checklist

  New and existing medications reconciled into one list, with a pillbox if helpful

  Follow-up appointments scheduled before leaving the hospital, not after

  A clear path at home free of fall hazards, especially to the bathroom

  Someone available for the first 24–48 hours, even if just to check in

  A plan for meals that doesn't rely on the person who just came home

Source: Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Re-Engineered Discharge (RED) Toolkit.

Warning signs that need a call, not a wait

New confusion, a fever, worsening pain, shortness of breath, or a fall should prompt a call to the discharging physician or a return to care right away — don't wait for the next scheduled appointment.

What kind of support usually helps most

Most families in this window benefit from temporary, focused help rather than a permanent care plan - what we call Transition Care: medication oversight, mobility assistance, and monitoring for complications, typically for a few weeks while recovery stabilizes.