SUCCESSFUL DISCHARGE INTO THE COMMUNITY  2 
Limiting Re-Hospitalization Rates of Patients Successfully Discharged into The Community 
Successful discharge into the community not only improves patients’ long-term 
mental health care but also reduces the costs of treating mentally ill patients (Sisti, Segal, & 
Emanuel, 2015). Similarly, discharging individuals with chronic health problems reduce costs 
related to the management of the chronic diseases, particularly by use of activity tracking 
devices (Chiauzzi, Rodarte, & DasMahapatra, 2015). Nevertheless, not all successfully 
discharged patients improve their state of health after discharge into the community, thereby 
requiring re-hospitalization (Kane, et al., 2015). Hence, successfully discharging a patient 
into the community does not guarantee reduced re-hospitalization rate for all the patients 
discharged. 
Consequently, a statistical comparison between the hospitalized mental health patients 
and individuals with chronic health problems can provide solutions to limit re-hospitalization 
rate among the patients. The objective of this study shall focus on the statistical comparisons 
between hospitalized mental health patients successfully discharged into the community and 
individuals with chronic health problems, limited re-hospitalization rates. Other objectives 
include improvement of effective successful discharge of patients and reduced re-
hospitalization rates among patients with either mental health problems or chronic illness. 
The research question for this study is: 
What are the statistics of hospitalized mental health patients, successfully discharging 
into the community, compared to the individual with chronic health problems, limited re-
hospitalization rates within 30 days after discharge? 
P = hospitalized mental health patients 
I = successfully discharging into the community 
C = individual with chronic health problems 
O = limited re-hospitalization rates