Hospital discharges happen fast — from UT Southwestern, Baylor, Texas Health, or Medical City. Here's how Dallas families navigate a stressful discharge into a safe senior care placement within days.
By David Reyes, LCSW · March 11, 2026
Every major Dallas hospital has social workers or care-transition specialists who coordinate the discharge order, therapy recommendations, and skilled nursing referrals. UT Southwestern Medical Center, Baylor University Medical Center, Texas Health Presbyterian Dallas, Medical City Dallas, Parkland Health, Methodist Dallas Medical Center, Medical City Plano, Texas Health Presbyterian Plano, Baylor Scott & White Medical Center McKinney, Medical City Las Colinas, and Texas Health Arlington Memorial all maintain discharge planning teams. Meet with the discharge planner early and ask directly: what level of care will my parent need at discharge, and will Medicare cover a skilled nursing stay?
As a clinical social worker, I'll be candid about a limit of the discharge planner's role: their job is to facilitate a safe, timely transition, not to help you choose the best facility. They may hand you a list. That's where a free, independent advisor adds real value — someone who knows the specific communities on that list, their HHSC inspection records on the HHSC Long-Term Care Provider Search (apps.hhs.texas.gov), and whether they hold the right Type A or Type B license for your parent's needs.
Most Dallas discharges point to one of three paths: (1) short-term skilled nursing rehabilitation, often Medicare-covered for up to 100 days after a qualifying inpatient hospital stay; (2) assisted living if ongoing daily support is needed but not skilled nursing; or (3) home with a licensed home health agency. The right path depends on the level of care ordered and the expected recovery trajectory.
A senior discharged from UT Southwestern Medical Center or Baylor University Medical Center might do well at a North Dallas or Lake Highlands assisted living community; a senior discharged from Medical City Plano or Baylor Scott & White McKinney may prefer a Collin County community closer to family in Frisco or Allen. Confirm the receiving community is licensed at the right level — a Type A license if the resident can evacuate without help, or a Type B license if staff assistance to evacuate is needed, which covers most higher-acuity and memory care residents.
Dallas-area assisted living and skilled nursing facilities can frequently accept a post-hospital resident within 24 to 72 hours when a bed is open. Have the essentials ready: the physician's discharge order, current medication list, insurance cards (Medicare, Medicaid, or VA), and any advance directive. Preparation before discharge is what makes a fast, safe placement possible.
Don't call communities one at a time from a hospital hallway. A free advisor works directly with the discharge planner at UT Southwestern, Baylor, Texas Health Presbyterian, Medical City, Parkland Health, or Methodist Dallas, identifies current openings across Dallas, Collin, Denton, and Tarrant counties, and coordinates the move so families aren't doing it alone under pressure.
Free, no-pressure call. We work for families, not facilities.