Preparing Transfer Summaries
Creates comprehensive transfer documentation for ICU-to-floor or facility-to-facility transitions to ensure continuity of care.
Why This Skill Exists
Transfers between levels of care represent high-risk discontinuity points where critical information is lost, orders are missed, and monitoring gaps occur. ICU-to-floor transfers carry a 4-8% "bounce-back" rate (return to ICU within 48 hours), and inadequate transfer communication is the most common contributing factor. Facility-to-facility transfers (hospital-to-SNF, hospital-to-LTACH, hospital-to-rehab) require regulatory-compliant documentation under CMS Conditions of Participation and EMTALA (for inter-hospital transfers).
The Joint Commission National Patient Safety Goal 02.05.01 mandates standardized communication during handoffs and transitions. For inter-facility transfers, Medicare and Medicaid require specific documentation: medical necessity for transfer, acceptance by the receiving facility, informed consent from the patient, and a transfer summary that accompanies the patient. Incomplete transfer documentation is a top citation in CMS surveys and a leading cause of adverse events in the post-acute setting.
Checkpoint A: Pre-Draft Intake (Mandatory)
Before preparing any transfer summary, confirm:
- What type of transfer is this — ICU-to-floor, floor-to-ICU, hospital-to-SNF, hospital-to-LTACH, hospital-to-rehab, or inter-hospital? (Default: Identify based on clinical scenario)
- What is the clinical reason for transfer — improvement (step-down) or deterioration (step-up)? (Default: Document clearly)
- Has the receiving provider/facility accepted the patient? (Default: Document name, time, and method of acceptance)
- Are there active drips, devices, or monitoring that must be addressed before or during transfer? (Default: Review current orders)
- What is the patient's code status? (Default: Confirm and document)
- Are there pending results or consults that affect the transfer? (Default: Document status and follow-up plan)
- For inter-facility transfers: Has EMTALA-compliant documentation been prepared? (Default: Required for all inter-hospital transfers)
- Has the patient or surrogate provided informed consent for the transfer? (Default: Required for inter-facility transfers)
Documents to Request
- Current H&P and most recent progress note
- Active problem list with treatment status
- Complete medication list (reconciled for transfer)
- Pending orders and results with follow-up responsibility
- Code status and advance directives
- Isolation precautions
- Lines, drains, and device inventory
- Nursing assessment of current functional status
- Insurance authorization for receiving facility (if applicable)
- EMTALA transfer certification (for inter-hospital transfers)
Step 1: ICU-to-Floor Transfer Summary
Use this template for all ICU-to-floor step-down transfers:
ICU TRANSFER SUMMARY
Transfer from: [ICU unit] → [Floor unit/bed]
Date/Time: [Timestamp]
Accepting provider: [Name, service]
ICU Admission Diagnosis: [Primary reason for ICU stay]
ICU Course Summary:
- Duration in ICU: [X days]
- Key interventions: [Intubation/mechanical ventilation, vasopressors,
CRRT, procedures performed]
- Complications during ICU stay: [List or "None"]
- Reason for transfer: [Clinical improvement criteria met]
Current Clinical Status:
- Vitals: [Most recent set]
- O2 requirement: [Current device and FiO2/flow rate]
- Mental status: [GCS or description — alert, oriented, etc.]
- Mobility: [Bed-bound, sit-to-stand, ambulating with assistance]
- Diet: [Current diet order and tolerance]
- Lines/Devices: [Central lines (type, site, day count), Foley (day count),
drains, wound vacs]
Active Problems and Plan:
1. [Problem]: [Current treatment, pending actions]
2. [Problem]: [Current treatment, pending actions]
(Continue for all active problems)
Medications at Transfer: [Complete list with recent changes highlighted]
Recent Medication Changes: [What was added, removed, or adjusted in ICU]
Pending Items:
- Labs: [Pending results with expected timing]
- Imaging: [Pending reads]
- Consults: [Active consults with follow-up plan]
- Procedures: [Scheduled or anticipated]
Monitoring Requirements Post-Transfer:
- Vital sign frequency: [Q2h x 24h recommended post-ICU]
- Telemetry: [Yes/No — indication]
- Specific parameters: [O2 sat target, BP parameters, UOP monitoring]
Code Status: [Current status]
Isolation: [Current precautions]
Allergies: [List with reaction types]
Contingency: [If X happens, do Y — specific to this patient's ICU issues]
Step 2: Facility-to-Facility Transfer Summary
For transfers to SNF, LTACH, rehab, or another hospital:
EMTALA Requirements (Inter-Hospital Only):
- Physician certification that benefits of transfer outweigh risks
- Sending facility has provided treatment within its capability
- Receiving facility has accepted the transfer and has capacity
- Patient (or surrogate) has given informed consent
- Medical records and imaging accompany the patient
- Transfer by qualified personnel with appropriate equipment
Transfer Summary Content:
- Hospital course summary (narrative, not just problem list)
- Active diagnoses with ICD-10 codes
- Complete medication list with dose, route, and frequency (reconciled for receiving facility formulary)
- Functional status at admission vs. at transfer
- Pending results and follow-up plan with responsible provider
- Follow-up appointments scheduled
- Equipment and supply needs (wound care supplies, O2, specialized equipment)
- Dietary requirements and nutritional status
- Code status and advance directive copies
- Physician-to-physician or physician-to-nurse verbal handoff documentation
Step 3: Medication Reconciliation at Transfer
Medication errors at transfer are the most common preventable adverse event:
- Compare: ICU medication list vs. floor-appropriate medications
- Convert: IV to PO where clinically appropriate (antibiotics, antihypertensives, pain medications, PPIs)
- Discontinue: ICU-specific medications no longer needed (propofol, vasopressors, stress dose steroids if tapering complete)
- Resume: Home medications held during ICU stay (assess appropriateness to resume)
- Reconcile: Verify no duplications, interactions, or contraindications in the transfer medication list
- Communicate: Highlight all medication changes in the transfer note for the receiving provider
Step 4: Post-Transfer Monitoring Plan
ICU-to-Floor (first 24-48 hours):
- Enhanced vital sign monitoring (Q2h minimum for first 24h)
- NEWS2 score calculation at each vital sign check
- Specific triggers for calling the covering physician
- Reassessment of ICU bounce-back risk factors (prior intubation, vasopressor weaning < 24h before transfer, active titrations)
Facility-to-Facility:
- Scheduled follow-up call to receiving facility within 24-48 hours
- PCP notification of transfer with summary
- Pending result follow-up assigned to specific provider
- 30-day readmission risk mitigation (medication access, follow-up confirmed, patient education documented)
Checkpoint B: Post-Draft Alignment (Mandatory)
Before executing any transfer:
- Has the receiving provider/facility confirmed acceptance?
- Is the medication list reconciled and transfer-appropriate?
- Are all lines and devices accounted for with necessity documented?
- Have pending results been assigned to a responsible follow-up provider?
- For inter-facility: Is EMTALA documentation complete (physician certification, consent, acceptance)?
Quality Audit
- [ ] Transfer type and reason are clearly documented
- [ ] Receiving provider/facility acceptance is documented with name, time, and method
- [ ] ICU course is summarized with key interventions and complications
- [ ] All active problems have a current treatment plan
- [ ] Medication reconciliation is complete with changes highlighted
- [ ] Lines, drains, and devices are inventoried with day counts and necessity
- [ ] Code status is confirmed and documented
- [ ] Isolation precautions are communicated
- [ ] Pending results have assigned follow-up responsibility
- [ ] Post-transfer monitoring orders are in place
- [ ] EMTALA documentation is complete (for inter-hospital transfers)
- [ ] Patient/surrogate consent for transfer is documented
- [ ] Contingency plans for post-transfer deterioration are documented
Guidelines
- ICU-to-floor transfers should occur during daytime hours when possible — nighttime transfers carry higher bounce-back rates
- Never transfer a patient with active drip titrations (vasopressors, insulin drips) to a floor that cannot manage them — confirm receiving unit capabilities
- Central line and Foley catheter necessity should be reassessed at every transfer — transfer is a natural discontinuation opportunity
- For facility-to-facility transfers, always include a physician-to-physician (or physician-to-nurse) verbal handoff — written documentation alone is insufficient
- Medication reconciliation errors at transfer are the most common adverse event — use a pharmacist-assisted reconciliation when available
- Include functional status in every transfer summary — the receiving facility needs this to set therapy goals and plan staffing
- Document follow-up appointments with date, time, provider name, and phone number — not just "follow up with PCP"
- Ensure advance directive copies physically accompany the patient for inter-facility transfers — EMR access may not transfer between systems
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