Facility Transfers That Don’t Fall Apart
The Transfer That Falls Apart
The patient is ready. The ambulette is on the way. The receiving facility is expecting them at 2:00 PM.
Then the calls start.
“The patient isn’t downstairs yet.” “We don’t have a wheelchair.” “The nurse with the paperwork went to lunch.” “The receiving unit says they weren’t notified.” “We’ve been waiting in the lobby for 40 minutes.”
Sound familiar?
Medical facility transfer transport fails the same way almost every time: not because of traffic, not because of vehicle breakdowns, but because of communication gaps between three parties who each assume the others have it handled.
The sending facility thinks the transport company knows where to go. The transport company thinks the patient is ready. The receiving facility thinks someone will call when the patient leaves. Nobody confirms anything until the patient is sitting in a hallway somewhere, wondering what went wrong.
This isn’t inevitable. Facility-to-facility transfers run smoothly every day—when everyone follows a handoff plan.
What a Handoff Plan Actually Does
A handoff plan eliminates the three questions that cause 90% of transfer delays:
- Where exactly is pickup? Not “the hospital”—which entrance, which floor, which unit, which room.
- Who is the contact? Not “the nurses’ station”—a name and direct number for someone who can release the patient.
- How do updates flow? Not “call if there’s a problem”—a clear path for ETA updates, arrival confirmation, and delay notifications.
When both facilities and the transport provider agree on these three things before the ride is dispatched, transfers stop falling apart.
Step-by-Step: The Sending Facility’s Role
If you’re coordinating a transfer from your facility, these steps prevent the most common delays.
Step 1: Confirm Patient Readiness Time
Don’t schedule transport for when you hope the patient will be ready. Schedule it for when they will actually be ready—discharge paperwork signed, belongings gathered, any required medical equipment prepared.
Build in buffer time. If the doctor rounds at 10:00 AM and typically signs discharge orders by 10:30, don’t schedule pickup for 10:30. Schedule for 11:00 or 11:30.
Step 2: Specify the Exact Pickup Location
“Main lobby” isn’t specific enough for a 12-story hospital with three wings.
Provide:
- Building name (if campus has multiple)
- Entrance (main, emergency, outpatient, loading dock)
- Floor and unit
- Room number or specific waiting area
- Any access instructions (badge required, call for escort, check in at desk)
Step 3: Designate a Release Contact
Give the transport provider the name and direct phone number of someone who can:
- Confirm the patient is ready
- Physically bring or escort the patient to the pickup point
- Hand over required documentation
“Call the floor” doesn’t work. The floor is busy. Calls go to voicemail. Designate one person.
Step 4: Prepare Transfer Documentation
Have ready before the driver arrives:
- Face sheet or patient identification
- Transfer summary or discharge paperwork
- Medication list (if continuing care)
- Any required authorizations
- Special instructions for receiving facility
Chasing paperwork while the driver waits adds 15-30 minutes to every transfer.
Step 5: Communicate Mobility and Equipment Needs
The transport company needs to send the right vehicle. Confirm:
- Ambulatory, wheelchair, or stretcher?
- Patient’s weight (critical for bariatric needs)
- Oxygen required? What flow rate?
- Any behavioral considerations?
- Personal belongings to transport?
Mismatched vehicles cause cancellations and same-day rebooking scrambles.
Step 6: Request ETA Updates
Ask the transport provider to notify you:
- When the driver is dispatched
- When the driver is 15-20 minutes out
- When the driver arrives
This lets you have the patient ready at the pickup point instead of rushing when the driver is already waiting.
Step-by-Step: The Receiving Facility’s Role
The receiving end has fewer steps but equal responsibility for a smooth handoff.
Step 1: Confirm the Expected Arrival Window
Don’t assume the sending facility’s estimated time is accurate. Confirm:
- What time was transport scheduled?
- What’s the expected transit time?
- Will you receive an ETA update?
Step 2: Designate a Receiving Contact
Give the transport provider (not just the sending facility) a name and direct number for:
- Someone who can confirm where to bring the patient
- Someone who can accept the patient and sign off on delivery
Step 3: Confirm the Intake Location
Drivers need specifics:
- Which entrance to use
- Where to park or pull up
- Which floor/unit to deliver to
- Whether to wait for intake completion or drop and confirm
Step 4: Prepare for the Patient’s Arrival
Have ready:
- Bed or room assignment
- Intake staff available
- Any required equipment (wheelchair, oxygen setup)
- Knowledge of the patient’s condition and mobility needs
Nothing delays a transfer like “we weren’t expecting them until tomorrow.”
Step 5: Communicate Any Access Requirements
Does the driver need:
- A gate code?
- Badge access?
- To check in at a security desk?
- To call upon arrival?
Drivers circling a campus looking for the right entrance adds delay.
The Transport Provider’s Role
A reliable medical facility transfer transport provider does more than drive. They’re the communication link between two facilities that may never speak directly.
Before Dispatch
During Transport
At Delivery
When Problems Arise
Complex Transfers: When Standard Protocols Aren’t Enough
Some patients require additional coordination beyond the basic handoff plan.
Stretcher Transfers
Stretcher patients can’t wait in a standard lobby. Coordination must include:
- Stretcher-accessible pickup point (loading dock, ambulance bay)
- Advance notice so the patient isn’t moved prematurely
- Confirmation that receiving facility has stretcher intake capability
- Clear understanding of whether this is medical transport or requires ambulance-level care
Bariatric Transfers
Weight capacity matters for vehicles and equipment. Failed bariatric transfers often happen because:
- The patient’s weight wasn’t accurately communicated
- The vehicle sent wasn’t rated for the patient’s weight
- The wheelchair or stretcher wasn’t bariatric-rated
- The receiving facility wasn’t prepared with appropriate equipment
Always confirm weight. “Large patient” isn’t enough information.
Patients with Cognitive Impairment
Dementia, Alzheimer’s, or acute confusion requires additional coordination:
- Patient should not wait alone in a lobby
- Driver may need escort or facility staff to remain with patient until departure
- Receiving facility needs advance notice of cognitive status
- Documentation should include any behavioral triggers or calming techniques
- Designated contact should be reachable if patient becomes agitated
Oxygen-Dependent Transfers
Confirm before booking:
- Flow rate required (liters per minute)
- Portable vs. continuous need
- Whether sending facility provides portable unit for transport
- Whether receiving facility has oxygen ready at intake
- Backup plan if equipment issues arise
The One-Page Handoff Checklist
Use this for every facility-to-facility transfer.
Sending Facility Confirms:
Receiving Facility Confirms:
Transport Provider Confirms:
The 30-Second Version
Prevent transfer delays by confirming the patient’s readiness time, the exact pickup point, and the receiving contact and intake location before the ride is dispatched. Request real-time ETA updates and arrival confirmation.
When all three parties—sending facility, receiving facility, and transport provider—agree on locations, contacts, and update procedures before dispatch, transfers stop falling apart.
Key Takeaways
Book Your Next Facility Transfer
Facility-to-facility transfers don’t have to be stressful. CATS provides medical facility transfer transport with real-time updates, verified pickup and delivery coordination, and drivers trained in complex patient needs.
[Book Now] or call (541) 527-1425(https://chrisabbotttransport.com/book) for transfers that need tight coordination and real-time updates.
Or call us directly: (209) 571-3282
Serving healthcare facilities throughout California’s Central Valley with reliable, coordinated medical transport.
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