Hospital discharge checklist for an elderly parent coming home

Published: June 2026

Bringing an elderly parent home from the hospital is one of the most important – and stressful – moments in caregiving. In a short window, you are expected to understand:

  • What actually changed during the hospital stay,
  • Which medications, equipment, and services are now part of the plan, and
  • How to keep your parent safe at home in the first days and weeks.

Without a simple hospital discharge checklist, it is easy to leave with a stack of papers and still feel unsure about what to do first when you walk through the front door.

This guide gives you a hospital discharge checklist for an elderly parent coming home you can use before and on the day of discharge. It is the checklist‑style companion to our fuller transition guide – a printable, task‑oriented post hospital discharge checklist for family caregivers that focuses on concrete questions and to‑dos rather than long explanations. It is designed to sit alongside:

It is educational and is not medical advice. Always follow the instructions you receive from your parent’s clinicians and discharge team; use this checklist to make sure you understand those instructions and can carry them out at home. For a broader overview of the discharge planning process and your rights as a family caregiver, the Family Caregiver Alliance’s Hospital Discharge Planning: A Guide for Families and Caregivers is a helpful companion.

On this page:

  • Quick answer – hospital discharge checklist at a glance
  • Part 1 – Questions to ask before your parent leaves the hospital
  • Part 2 – Medications, follow‑ups, and paperwork to confirm
  • Part 3 – Home safety and equipment checklist
  • Part 4 – First 72 hours at home: simple plan
  • Part 5 – What to track and when to call for help

Jump to checklist: Hospital discharge checklist


Quick answer: hospital discharge checklist at a glance

If you are skimming on a busy day, here is the short version of what to confirm before you bring an elderly parent home from the hospital:

  1. Diagnosis and “why now”

    • In plain language: what happened, what changed, and what you should watch for going forward.
  2. Medications

    • Updated list of all meds (new, stopped, dose changes).
    • When and how to give each one, and which side effects or red‑flag symptoms should prompt a call.
  3. Activity, mobility, and bathroom plan

    • How much your parent can safely walk, climb stairs, and get in/out of bed or chairs.
    • What help they need for the bathroom and bathing, and any restrictions (weight‑bearing, lifting, driving).
  4. Wounds, equipment, and therapy

    • Clear instructions for wound care, oxygen, drains, catheters, or other equipment (who orders, who maintains).
    • Whether home health, PT/OT, or other therapists are coming – and how/when.
  5. Follow‑up appointments and contacts

    • Dates and times (or time windows) for follow‑up visits.
    • Who to call for questions during office hours and after hours.
  6. Home setup and first‑week support

    • Basic home safety adjustments (bed, bathroom, lighting, tripping hazards).
    • Who is staying with your parent for the first few days and nights, and how to reach them.
  7. What to track at home and when to call

    • 3–5 things to write down daily (for example, pain, mobility, appetite, confusion, wound changes).
    • Specific thresholds for “call the office” vs “seek urgent or emergency care.”

The sections below turn this overview into a more detailed hospital discharge checklist you can print or copy into your own system.


Part 1 – Questions to ask before your parent leaves the hospital

You do not have to ask everything in one meeting, but before discharge it helps to have checked off these topics with the discharge planner, nurse, or doctor.

You can keep this section beside you and jot answers in plain language.

A. What happened and what changed?

  • ☐ What was the main reason for this hospital stay (in plain language)?
    • Example: “pneumonia,” “heart failure flare,” “hip fracture,” “confusion due to infection.”
  • ☐ How is my parent different now compared with before admission?
    • Walking, strength, breathing, memory, ability to manage daily tasks.
  • ☐ What is the goal for the next few weeks at home or in rehab?
    • For example, “walk to the bathroom with a walker,” “wean off oxygen,” “reduce confusion.”

B. What help will my parent need at home?

  • ☐ How much help will they need with:
    • Getting in and out of bed or chairs
    • Walking and using stairs
    • Bathing, dressing, and toileting
    • Meals, fluids, and medications
  • ☐ Is it safe for them to be alone at all, especially at night?
  • ☐ Should someone stay overnight for the first few nights or longer?

C. What should we watch for that might mean things are getting worse?

For your parent’s specific diagnosis, ask:

  • ☐ “What specific symptoms or changes should make us call the office?”
  • ☐ “What would make you want us to go to urgent care or the ER instead of waiting?”
  • ☐ “In your experience, what early warning signs do families sometimes miss after this kind of hospital stay?”

Write these in your own words; you will use them again in your at‑home tracking.


Part 2 – Medications, follow‑ups, and paperwork to confirm

Hospital stays often result in new medication lists, new appointments, and new forms. Use this part of the discharge checklist to make sure nothing important is left vague.

A. Medications

  • ☐ Do we have an updated, complete medication list, including:
    • All meds to start (name, dose, when and how to take),
    • Meds to stop, and
    • Meds that stayed the same.
  • ☐ Has someone walked us through the list in plain language, including:
    • What each key medication is for,
    • Which combinations we should be careful about (for example, sleep meds + fall risk), and
    • Any common or dangerous side effects to watch for.
  • ☐ Do we know where the prescriptions were sent and whether prior authorizations are needed?

You can copy final instructions into your caregiver daily log and doctor visit summary template for the first follow‑up appointment.

B. Follow‑up appointments and services

  • ☐ Which follow‑up appointments do we already have scheduled (date, time, location)?
  • ☐ For appointments not yet scheduled, do we know:
    • Which clinics to call,
    • Recommended timeframe (for example, “within 7 days”), and
    • Whether anyone from the hospital will help schedule?
  • ☐ Are we getting home health, PT/OT, nursing visits, or other services after discharge?
    • Which agency or provider will call us, and when?
    • What should we do if we do not hear from them within that timeframe?

C. Paperwork, forms, and benefits

  • ☐ Did any forms get completed or updated during the stay (for example, disability paperwork, DMV forms, LTCI forms, Medicaid or home‑health authorizations)?
  • ☐ Do we have copies or know where to access them (patient portal, mail)?
  • ☐ Are there any open benefits questions we should follow up on, such as:
    • “Could this hospital stay affect rehab days, home‑health coverage, or long‑term care insurance?”
    • “Is there a social worker or case manager who can walk us through those options?”

You can use How LTCI, Medicaid, and private pay fit together for home care as a high‑level framework if you are starting to think about funding home care during or after this transition.


Part 3 – Home safety and equipment checklist

Before or immediately after discharge, walk through the home with this safety checklist in mind.

A. Where will your parent spend most of their time?

  • ☐ Do we know where your parent will sleep (same bedroom, temporary main‑floor setup, recliner if recommended)?
  • ☐ Is there a clear path between bed, bathroom, and kitchen with minimal clutter and cords?
  • ☐ Is there space for equipment (walker, wheelchair, commode, oxygen, etc.)?

B. Bathroom and fall prevention

  • ☐ Is there a sturdy grab bar or rail near the toilet and in the shower (not just a towel rack)?
  • ☐ Do we have a non‑slip mat in the tub/shower and on bathroom floors?
  • ☐ Is the toilet height appropriate, or do we need a raised seat or commode?
  • ☐ Is there adequate lighting at night from bed to bathroom (night‑lights, motion lights)?

C. Equipment and supplies

  • ☐ Has the team ordered or discussed needed equipment, such as:
    • Walker or cane
    • Wheelchair
    • Shower chair or bench
    • Bed rail or hospital bed
    • Oxygen, nebulizer, or other devices
  • ☐ Do we understand:
    • Who is delivering or setting up each item, and when,
    • Who to call if equipment is not working, and
    • Any safety instructions (for example, oxygen around cooking or smoking)?

D. Who is with your parent (and how to reach them)?

  • ☐ Who is staying with your parent for the first 24–72 hours at home?
  • ☐ Who is the backup if that person gets sick or plans change?
  • ☐ Does everyone know how to contact each other – and where key info (med list, doctor numbers, discharge paperwork) will live in the home?

Part 4 – First 72 hours at home: simple plan

The first three days home are often the rockiest. Use this section as a rough Day 0 / Day 1–2 plan.

Day 0 (day of discharge)

  • ☐ Review the medication list and set up a simple system (pillbox, list on the fridge, or a medication‑tracking template).
  • ☐ Do a slow walk‑through from bed to bathroom to kitchen with your parent using any equipment they need.
  • ☐ Note any immediate concerns: pain, shortness of breath, confusion, or near‑falls.
  • ☐ Decide where to keep discharge papers, your hospital‑stay log, and this checklist (binder, folder, or digital workspace).

Days 1–2

  • ☐ Stick close to home and keep the schedule light; plan for extra rest.
  • ☐ Use your caregiver daily log or observation log to jot down:
    • Pain levels,
    • Mobility (how much help they need to move around),
    • Appetite and fluids,
    • Sleep and confusion changes,
    • Any new or worsening symptoms.
  • ☐ Confirm or schedule any follow‑up appointments you did not book before discharge.
  • ☐ Check that prescriptions were filled and that any home‑health or therapy providers have contacted you on schedule.

You can build on this with the fuller Day 0 / Day 1–Day 7 plan in How to help a parent transition home after a hospital stay.


Part 5 – What to track and when to call for help

Your discharge instructions should include specific red‑flag symptoms for your parent’s situation. Use those as your guide, but consider tracking at least:

  • Daily:

    • Pain (worse / same / better)
    • Mobility (how much help they needed to get around)
    • Appetite and fluids (eating/drinking more, less, or the same)
    • Confusion or behavior changes (more disoriented, agitated, sleepy)
    • Wound or skin changes (if applicable)
  • When something feels off:

    • Near‑falls or falls (what happened, where, injuries)
    • Shortness of breath, chest pain, or new/worsening symptoms
    • Medication issues (missed doses, side effects, confusion about the schedule)

Write these down in:

  • Your caregiver observation log (for health changes and patterns), and
  • Your doctor visit summary template before each follow‑up appointment, so you can share specific examples. The same notes often become useful evidence for programs like long‑term care insurance or Medicaid, because they show what changed in the days and weeks right after the hospital stay.

When to call

Use the thresholds you wrote down from the hospital team, but as a general pattern:

  • Call the clinic or on‑call line if:

    • Pain is getting significantly worse despite following the plan,
    • Confusion or agitation has increased over a day or two,
    • Breathing, swelling, or wound changes worry you but do not feel like an emergency.
  • Seek urgent or emergency care (or follow local emergency guidance) if you see:

    • New or worsening chest pain,
    • Sudden shortness of breath or trouble breathing,
    • Signs of stroke (face drooping, arm weakness, speech changes),
    • A serious fall, especially with head injury or new inability to stand,
    • Sudden, severe confusion or unresponsiveness.

When in doubt, trust your instincts and the instructions from your parent’s clinicians. You can always update this hospital discharge checklist and your logs later – the priority is keeping your parent safe during this hospital‑to‑home transition.

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