You Made It Home — Now What?
Getting discharged from a rehab facility is a huge milestone. But for many patients, going home doesn't mean you're done with medical care. It means the care follows you home.
Home care — also called home health — means nurses, therapists, or aides come to your house on a schedule to help with your recovery. You don't have to go anywhere. They come to you.
This can feel like a relief after weeks in a facility. But it also comes with questions: How often will they come? Who pays for it? What if I need more help than they give me? This guide answers all of that in plain language.
How often will a nurse come to my home?
Home nursing visits are typically limited to three times per week at most. Some patients get fewer visits — it depends on what your medical team thinks you need and what your insurance approves.
These visits are not all-day. A home nurse comes for a set period — usually 30 minutes to an hour — to check your vitals, review your medications, change wound dressings, or monitor a specific condition. Then they leave.
If you were expecting someone to be there all day, that's a different level of care (private-duty nursing or home health aide services), and it usually requires either additional insurance approval or private payment.
What kinds of things does home care help with?
Home care nurses and therapists help with medical needs that require professional supervision but don't require a hospital or facility. The most common reasons patients receive home care include:
- Wound care — changing dressings, monitoring for infection, managing wound vacs
- New diagnoses — if you were just diagnosed with diabetes, heart failure, COPD, or had a pacemaker placed, a nurse helps you learn to manage it at home
- Blood pressure monitoring — especially if your blood pressure has been hard to control or medications were recently changed
- Medication management — making sure new medications are working, watching for side effects, and helping you understand what you're taking and why
- Post-surgical follow-up — checking incision sites, monitoring recovery
- Physical or occupational therapy — a therapist comes to your home to continue the exercises you were doing in rehab
The key idea: home care is for active medical management, not general help around the house. If you just need someone to cook meals or help with laundry, that's a different service.
What about home infusions?
Some patients go home on IV medications — antibiotics, hydration, or other infusions that need to be given through a vein. This is called home infusion therapy.
Home infusion typically requires a minimum commitment of about 7 days. The companies that provide this service generally won't set up the equipment and schedule visits for just 2 or 3 days — it's not practical for them or safe for you.
Depending on the medication, the home infusion company may send their own nurse to administer it, or some medications come with nursing included as part of the service. Others require your home health nurse to do it. Your discharge team should clarify this before you leave.
If you're only expected to need IV medication for a few days, you may finish that course in the rehab facility before going home instead.
How long does home care last?
Home care is not forever. It's designed to get you stable and independent, then step back.
A typical home care episode lasts 6 to 12 weeks, depending on your condition and your insurance plan. At regular intervals, your care team reevaluates whether you still need visits. If you're improving, they may reduce the frequency or end the service.
How often you're reevaluated depends entirely on your insurance. Some plans check every few weeks. Others have set episode lengths.
What if you still need help after insurance stops paying?
This is more common than people expect. If the insurance-covered home care ends and you still feel like you need help, you have options:
- Ask your doctor to request an extension or additional visits — sometimes the insurance company will approve more if there's clear medical need
- Hire private-pay home care to supplement what insurance covers — this means paying out of pocket for extra visits
- Look into community programs, visiting nurse associations, or charity care that may offer reduced-cost services
The important thing: don't just go without care because the insurance benefit ran out. Talk to your doctor about what you actually need.
Can I leave rehab before the full stay?
Yes. You can leave a rehab facility at any time. You are not locked in. If you want to go home, you have that right.
That said, the care team generally recommends a minimum stay of about 7 days for most rehab admissions, especially if medications are being adjusted or you're being set up with home services. Leaving after just 2 or 3 days can mean:
- Your home care services haven't been arranged yet
- Your medications haven't been fully stabilized
- Your therapy team hasn't had enough time to assess what you'll need at home
If you're eager to go home — and that's understandable — talk to your nurse or social worker about what still needs to happen before discharge. There may be things they can speed up. But leaving against medical advice can affect your insurance coverage, so always ask: "If I leave today, will my insurance still cover the next steps?"
What about cardiac rehab?
If you had a heart attack, heart surgery, or were diagnosed with heart failure, you may hear the term cardiac rehab. This is a specific program of supervised exercise and education — and it's usually outpatient, meaning you go to a clinic or hospital for scheduled sessions.
Cardiac rehab is not the same as going to a nursing home for heart problems. If you're admitted to a skilled nursing facility after a cardiac event, that's for general medical rehab — the nursing staff helps manage your heart medications, monitors your vital signs, and makes sure you're stable. The physical therapy you get there is general strengthening and mobility.
Once you're home and strong enough, your cardiologist may refer you to an outpatient cardiac rehab program where you exercise under medical supervision, usually 2-3 times per week for several weeks. This is a separate service from home care.
Questions to Ask Before You Go Home
Before you leave the facility, make sure you or your family asks:
- How many home nursing visits per week will I get? And for how long?
- Will I have home physical therapy? How many sessions per week?
- Am I going home on any IV medications? If so, who administers them?
- What happens when my home care benefit runs out? Can I get an extension?
- If I need more help than insurance covers, what are my options?
- Who do I call if something goes wrong at home? (Get a specific name and number, not just "call 911")
- When is my first follow-up appointment? And with which doctor?
Write the answers down. The day you go home can be overwhelming, and it's easy to forget details. Having it on paper means you can refer back to it when you need to.