The call arrives without warning. Your father’s surgeon says he’s stable — ready to come home tomorrow. You have less than 24 hours to transform a bedroom into a safe recovery space, figure out which equipment you need, and make sure you’re not sending him somewhere he could get seriously hurt.
This moment overwhelms most families. Not because they don’t care, but because hospitals are far better at treating illness than they are at preparing families for what comes after. Research shows that approximately 27% of all patients who return to the hospital within 30 days could have stayed home if the right setup and support had been in place.1 The failure isn’t always medical. Often, it’s logistical.
This is your complete hospital discharge home setup checklist. It covers what to do before discharge day, how to set up the bedroom safely, which equipment genuinely matters, bathroom modifications that prevent falls, medication management, and how to build a care team that doesn’t collapse in week two. Work through each phase and your home — and your family member — will be ready.
What Hospitals Don’t Tell You About the First 30 Days
Discharge planning at most hospitals is a compressed process. Social workers are stretched thin, discharge summaries get handed over at the last minute, and families are expected to absorb complex care instructions during one of the most stressful moments of their lives.
The consequences are real. Up to 40% of older adults experience a fall within six months of discharge from an acute care or rehabilitation ward, and the risk is highest in that first month at home.2 Of those falls, nearly half cause injuries serious enough to require medical attention.3 Meanwhile, medication errors affect the majority of people leaving the hospital: one systematic review found the median rate of unintentional medication discrepancies following discharge was 53%, with 68% of patients leaving with at least one error in their medication instructions.4
These aren’t failures of willpower or intelligence. They’re failures of transition — the gap between what hospitals prepare families for and what home recovery actually requires. This hospital discharge home setup checklist is designed to close that gap.
Phase 1: Pre-Discharge Checklist — What to Do Before Leaving the Hospital
The 48 to 72 hours before discharge is your window. Don’t wait until discharge day to start preparing — by then, you’ll be managing logistics and emotions simultaneously, and things will be missed.
Request a Discharge Planning Meeting
Ask to meet with the hospital’s discharge coordinator or social worker — not just the bedside nurse. That person’s job is coordinating the transition, and they have access to resources the nursing staff doesn’t. In that meeting, confirm:
- The exact discharge date and time. You need real information, not “sometime this week.”
- Home health care referrals. Is the team ordering a visiting nurse, physical therapist, or occupational therapist? If not, ask whether your family member qualifies — many do.
- Durable medical equipment (DME) orders. Has the physician ordered a hospital bed, wheelchair, walker, shower bench, or commode? DME takes time to coordinate — start immediately.
- Follow-up appointment. Patients who see their primary care physician within 7 days of discharge have significantly lower readmission rates.5 Schedule this before leaving, not after.
Collect Every Piece of Written Documentation
Before your family member leaves the building, collect in writing:
- Complete discharge summary — diagnosis, procedures performed, what changed during this hospitalization
- Full medication reconciliation list — every current medication with dose, timing, and any food interactions
- Wound care instructions with specific dressing change protocols, if applicable
- Activity restrictions — what they can’t do, and for how long
- Warning signs list — specific symptoms requiring a call to the physician or a return to the ER
- All specialist contact information and next appointment dates
If the hospital offers a patient portal, activate it before you leave. Remote access to lab results and care notes prevents unnecessary calls to the nurse line — and catches problems early.
Arrange Transportation and First-Night Coverage
Hospitals often discharge in the afternoon. By the time you arrive home, get settled, and fill prescriptions, it can be early evening. Plan ahead: a vehicle your family member can comfortably enter (step height matters more than you’d expect), someone to stay the first night, food delivery or prepared meals for the first 48 hours, and prescription pickup on or before discharge day.
If you’re coordinating all of this under time pressure, our full guide to caring for an elderly parent after hospital discharge covers the coordination demands in depth.
Phase 2: Bedroom Setup — The Most Critical Room in the House
Your family member will spend most of their recovery time in the bedroom. Getting this room right has a greater impact on outcomes than any other modification you’ll make.
The Right Bed Is the Foundation of Safe Recovery
Standard home beds are designed for healthy sleepers, not for people recovering from illness, surgery, or significant mobility changes. A typical bed sits 25 to 30 inches high — too high for someone with limited leg strength to exit safely after a cardiac event, and too low for someone with hip replacement restrictions to rise from without risking joint damage.
A full-electric adjustable care bed changes this equation. The Aura Premium home hospital bed adjusts from 10 inches at its FallSafe ultra-low position — close enough to the floor that a fall becomes a roll rather than a crash — up to 39 inches for caregiver access during care procedures. The head and knee sections elevate independently, so someone recovering from a respiratory condition, cardiac event, or abdominal surgery can sleep in the position their physician recommends, not the one their mattress allows.
For families setting up a discharge recovery space, this isn’t a luxury consideration — it’s a safety one. A bed that adjusts to transfer height reduces fall risk at the moment of getting up. A bed with proper elevation reduces aspiration risk and reflux. Assist rails reduce rolling risk during sleep. Our guide on setting up a hospital-grade bedroom at home walks through everything the room needs beyond the bed itself.
Bedroom Setup Checklist
- ☐ Adjustable bed height set to safe transfer position before first use
- ☐ Clear pathways — minimum 36 inches on both sides of the bed for walker or wheelchair clearance
- ☐ Motion-activated nightlight or bedside lamp on the path from bed to bathroom
- ☐ Phone or call device within arm’s reach at all times
- ☐ Overbed table for medications, water, remote, and reading materials
- ☐ Bedside commode if bathroom distance is a concern or mobility is limited at night
- ☐ Non-slip flooring, loose rugs removed — rugs are a leading cause of post-discharge falls
- ☐ Bed assist rail if your family member needs support pulling to a seated position
- ☐ Pressure redistribution mattress if they’ll spend significant time in bed
Phase 3: Home Medical Equipment Checklist
The equipment list varies by diagnosis and mobility level, but a core set applies to most recovery situations. Order as early as possible — standard DME delivery runs 3 to 10 business days, and you don’t want to be problem-solving on day one.
Essential Home Care Equipment by Category
Mobility and Transfer
- Hospital-grade adjustable bed (if prescribed, or if a standard bed is unsafe for transfers)
- Walker or rollator appropriate for your flooring type
- Wheelchair if ambulation is restricted for any portion of the day
- Gait belt for caregivers assisting with standing transfers
- Transfer board for bed-to-wheelchair moves without full standing
Bed Safety and Comfort
- Assist rails or full side rails compatible with the bed frame
- Pressure redistribution mattress — SonderCare’s mattress range includes foam-based pressure relief options for recovery patients and alternating pressure air systems for higher skin-integrity risk
- Waterproof mattress cover
- Overbed table on wheels
Bathroom Safety
- Raised toilet seat or bedside commode (a commode eliminates nighttime bathroom trips entirely)
- Shower chair or transfer bench
- Handheld showerhead for seated bathing
- Non-slip bath mat inside and outside the tub or shower
Daily Care Management
- Weekly pill organizer with AM and PM compartments
- Medication list printed and posted visibly
- Blood pressure monitor if the physician requests home monitoring
- Pulse oximeter if a respiratory or cardiac condition is involved
- All wound care supplies specified in the discharge instructions
For a deeper breakdown of what to prioritize when budget or delivery time is limited, our guide to home care equipment for elderly at home covers each category and what’s urgent versus what can wait.
Medicare, DME, and Delivery Timelines
Many pieces of equipment qualify as durable medical equipment under Medicare Part B when a physician has written an order and the supplier is Medicare-enrolled. If the discharge team has provided a DME order, call the supplier immediately. Standard delivery runs 3 to 10 business days. SonderCare’s White Glove Rush service delivers and installs within 1 to 3 business days for families working against a tight discharge timeline, with a full feature walkthrough before the team leaves.
Phase 4: Bathroom Safety Modifications
Bathrooms are the most dangerous room in any home for someone with reduced mobility or strength. Hard surfaces, water, and the need to transition between seated and standing positions create a concentrated fall risk that accounts for a disproportionate share of post-discharge injuries.
Bathroom Safety Checklist
- ☐ Grab bars installed beside the toilet and inside and outside the shower — permanent mount to wall studs, not suction cups
- ☐ Shower chair or transfer bench positioned and tested before discharge day
- ☐ Handheld showerhead installed to allow bathing while seated
- ☐ Non-slip mat inside the shower or tub and on the bathroom floor
- ☐ Raised toilet seat if hip or knee restrictions apply — confirm exact minimum height with the surgeon, since hip replacement protocols specify precise minimums
- ☐ Nightlight in the bathroom for safe nighttime use
- ☐ Clear path from bedroom to bathroom with no loose rugs or obstacles
If a commode will be placed beside the bed, position it on the stronger side and verify the locking brakes are engaged before each transfer. This one step prevents the commode from sliding — a common fall cause that’s easy to prevent and rarely anticipated.
Staircase Considerations
If the primary bedroom is upstairs and your family member can’t safely navigate stairs, convert a main-floor room for recovery before discharge day. Stairs are one of the most common barriers families fail to plan for until the last minute. If a stair lift isn’t in place, identify a ground-floor bedroom option now — even temporarily. Our guide on fall prevention at home for seniors covers hazard identification room by room.
Phase 5: Medication Management After Discharge
Medication errors after discharge are one of the most common — and most preventable — causes of post-discharge complications. A 2024 clinical trial found that pharmacist-led medication reconciliation identified an average of 1.3 errors per patient at discharge, with 35% of those errors carrying the potential to cause emergency visits or readmissions.6 The problem isn’t carelessness — it’s complexity. Someone might leave the hospital on three new medications while continuing five existing ones, with dose changes in two of the original five. Managing that without a system is genuinely hard.
Medication Management Checklist
- ☐ Reconcile the full medication list — every drug, dose, timing, and known food interaction
- ☐ Fill all new prescriptions before or on discharge day
- ☐ Set up a weekly pill organizer with AM and PM sections for each day
- ☐ Post the medication list somewhere visible — on the refrigerator, the bedside table, or the medicine cabinet
- ☐ Schedule a pharmacist consultation — many pharmacies offer free medication review calls within 48 hours of discharge
- ☐ Confirm what stops — some hospital medications are short-course and shouldn’t be continued past a specific date
- ☐ Know which side effects to watch for — new medications often require a monitoring period during which specific symptoms warrant a call to the prescriber
If your family member spends any part of the day alone, a medication reminder app or automated dispenser reduces the risk of missed or doubled doses. These aren’t high-tech solutions — they’re practical ones, and they make a measurable difference in adherence during recovery.
Phase 6: Building the Home Care Team
No family can sustain around-the-clock care alone, and no one should try. Caregiver burnout — exhaustion that builds until the caregiver’s own health is at risk — is one of the most common secondary crises in the first month of home recovery. A realistic, scheduled care team prevents this from becoming the crisis that forces a readmission.
Care Team Setup Checklist
- ☐ Home health visits confirmed — when does the visiting nurse start, and how many visits per week are ordered?
- ☐ Physical therapy and occupational therapy scheduled — these are often prescribed and critically important for restoring safe function; missing early sessions delays recovery
- ☐ Primary care follow-up scheduled within 7 days of discharge5
- ☐ Family rotation schedule written out and shared — who covers which days, nights, and specific tasks
- ☐ Home health aide or personal care attendant engaged if needed for bathing, dressing, and daily mobility
- ☐ Emergency contacts posted — physician, home health nurse, specialist, pharmacy, and clear criteria for when to call 911
An occupational therapist home visit in the first week is particularly valuable. OTs are trained to spot the hazards families overlook — the bathroom door that opens the wrong way for a walker, the light switch that requires reaching across the bed, the step that’s been invisible for 20 years and is now a fall waiting to happen. If a home OT assessment isn’t included in the discharge orders, ask the care team to add one.
Warning Signs: When to Call the Doctor or Return to the Hospital
Before discharge day, establish a clear threshold for seeking care. Many families wait too long because they don’t want to overreact — and because the primary care appointment is still five days away.
Post this list in the kitchen or beside the bed.
Call the physician or nurse line same day for:
- Wound appearing red, swollen, warm, or showing signs of opening at the edges
- Fever above 100.4 F (38 C)
- New confusion, unusual drowsiness, or significant change in alertness or behavior
- Pain significantly worse than the discharge team described as expected
- Inability to take prescribed medications due to nausea or swallowing difficulty
- Sudden swelling in legs or feet
Call 911 or go directly to the emergency department for:
- Chest pain or pressure
- Shortness of breath or rapid breathing
- Sudden weakness or numbness on one side of the body
- Severe fall, especially with head impact
- Loss of consciousness or unresponsiveness
Condition-specific warning signs from the discharge team always take precedence over general guidance. If the discharge summary includes a warning signs section, that’s the one to post.
Related Questions About Hospital Discharge Home Setup
How much time do I have to prepare before my family member comes home?
Most hospital discharges are communicated 24 to 48 hours in advance, though sometimes the window is shorter. If you get advance notice, work through the pre-discharge checklist: request the discharge planning meeting, confirm equipment orders, and arrange first-night coverage. If you’re caught by surprise, prioritize in this order: safe sleeping surface first, medications second, bathroom safety third.
Does Medicare cover home hospital beds after discharge?
Medicare Part B covers durable medical equipment — including hospital beds — when a physician certifies medical necessity. You’ll need a written order, a Medicare-enrolled supplier, and documentation of medical need. Coverage generally applies to the bed frame; mattresses and accessories may require separate justification. Call SonderCare directly for practical guidance on navigating the DME process — the team handles this regularly.
What’s the difference between home health and personal care?
Home health is clinical care at home — nursing visits, physical therapy, wound care — typically covered by Medicare when prescribed after a qualifying hospital stay. Personal care is non-medical support — bathing, dressing, meal preparation — generally not covered by Medicare and requiring private pay, Medicaid in some states, or long-term care insurance. Your family member may need both, from different providers.
When does a home hospital bed make sense versus a standard bed?
A hospital-grade adjustable care bed makes sense when the person can’t safely transfer in and out of a standard bed independently, when they require specific positioning for a medical condition, when they’re at fall risk and need adjustable height, or when they need caregiver assistance with daily care tasks that require the bed height to change. For guidance on selecting the right model for your situation, our guide to choosing a home hospital bed covers the key decision factors.
My family member says they don’t want a hospital bed. How do I approach this?
The framing matters more than the facts here. “Recovery bed” lands better than “hospital bed.” SonderCare’s Aura line is specifically designed to avoid the institutional look — upholstered panels, premium headboards, and residential finishes that integrate with a real bedroom rather than converting it into a patient room. Showing a photo of what the bed actually looks like often changes the conversation. The Aura Platinum, in particular, is regularly mistaken for high-end furniture.
Your Hospital Discharge Home Setup: Where to Start
Hospital discharge isn’t the end of a health event. It’s the beginning of a recovery phase that requires the right environment, the right equipment, and a realistic care plan built before things get hard.
Here’s your priority sequence:
- Today, or as soon as you know about the discharge: Request the discharge planning meeting, begin collecting documentation, and identify any DME orders that need to be placed immediately.
- 48 hours before discharge: Confirm equipment delivery, arrange first-night coverage, and schedule the primary care follow-up appointment.
- Discharge day: Set up the bedroom and bathroom, fill all prescriptions, and do a full medication walkthrough before your family member leaves the hospital team’s care.
- Days 2 through 7: Confirm home health visits have started, post warning signs in a visible location, and finalize the family care rotation schedule.
The families who navigate discharge transitions well don’t do it alone — and they don’t figure it out on the fly. When you’re unsure what equipment is needed, what Medicare covers, or how quickly a bed can be delivered and installed, the right move is to call someone who handles this every day. SonderCare’s bed experts have guided hundreds of families through exactly this kind of discharge setup. Speak with a SonderCare expert today — the consultation is free, and the guidance is specific to your situation.
References
- Jencks SF, Williams MV, Coleman EA. “Rehospitalizations among Patients in the Medicare Fee-for-Service Program.” New England Journal of Medicine, 2009. https://www.nejm.org/doi/full/10.1056/nejmsa0803563
- Naseri C, et al. “Falls After Hospital Discharge: A Randomized Clinical Trial of Individualized Multimodal Falls Prevention Education.” Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, 2020. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7330456/
- Inacio MCS, et al. “Posthospital Fall Injuries and 30-Day Readmissions in Adults 65 Years and Older.” JAMA Network Open, 2019. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6632136/
- Mekonnen AB, et al. “Prevalence and Nature of Medication Errors and Medication-Related Harm Following Discharge from Hospital to Community Settings: A Systematic Review.” Drug Safety, 2020. https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC7235049/
- Hernandez AF, et al. “Relationship Between Early Physician Follow-up and 30-Day Readmission Among Medicare Beneficiaries Hospitalized for Heart Failure.” JAMA, 2010. https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jama/fullarticle/186547
- Zheng V, et al. “Impact of Pharmacist-Led Discharge Medication Reconciliation on Error and Patient Harm Prevention at a Large Academic Medical Center.” Journal of the American College of Clinical Pharmacy, 2024. https://accpjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/jac5.1980