See: discharge plan .
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Determining what the patient’s medical needs will be after discharge from a hospital or other inpatient treatment.
Insurance Encyclopedia
Discharge planning (Health Insurance)
Conceiving a plan to treat the patient’s medical requirements after he or she is released from inpatient treatment.
Discharge provision
Clause in an insurance contract about a small estates law that releases an insurance company from liability if it pays the proceeds to the deceased insured’s estate.
Discharge status
1. Disposition of the patient at the time of hospital discharge. This may be documented as patient left against medical advice, patient released to home, patient transferred to a skilled nursing facility or acute care hospital, or patient expired. 2. The patient discharge status is entered in Field 17 of the Uniform Bill (UB-04) inpatient hospital billing claim form.
Discharge summary
Report prepared by the patient’s attending physician at the conclusion of a patient’s hospital stay that summarizes the diagnosis, treatment, and results and outlines any further treatment after discharge. Also see abstract and discharge plan .
Discharge transfer
Formal reassignment of an inpatient to another facility for further health care.
discharged—not final billed (DNFB) balance
Financial account balances of patients’ records that remain uncoded after the bill-hold period expires or claims that have not passed the edits and have not yet been corrected.
Disclaimer
In managed care plans, this is a form used when a patient presents for services without a referral to a specialist. It may also be used when a patient accesses services of a primary care provider (PCP) who is not the patient’s designated PCP or is not in the PCP’s call share group. The patient is asked to sign this form to indicate an understanding that he or she may be financially responsible for charges incurred during the visit.
Disclaimer notices
Notices displayed in public access premises such as hotels, garages, etc., or where property is left. The bailee or occupier of premises may seek to exempt or restrict liability for loss or damage to property or personal injury. The Unfair Contract Terms Act 1977 prohibits businesses from exempting their liability for death or injury resulting from negligence. Exemption of liability for loss/damage to property resulting from negligence is allowed if reasonable, but the disclaimer notice will not be effective unless it has first been brought to the attention of the bailor or other party.
Disclose
Access, release, transfer, or otherwise divulge health information to any internal or external user of the data.