Mortality rates among pluripathological patients are significantly higher in the hospital
setting, with advanced age and dependence on certain vital functions the main clinical aspects.
Other features involved in the care, such as the loss of autonomy and social problems, have important
ethical implications. The aim of this article is to analyze the health problems and the functional and
social situation of chronic patients after hospital admission in order to determine their care needs
and the ethical implications these might have. For this, a cross-sectional descriptive study is being
carried out with a sample of 111 chronic pluripathological patients admitted to the internal medicine
service and discharged later. Overall, 96.6% of the patients in the sample were dependent, 91.7%
had social problems or were at social risk and 36.9% had cognitive impairment. Among dependent
patients, 59.4% had social problems (p = 0.029), 19.2% lived alone (p = 0.13), and in 73.3% of cases the
housing was inadequate (p = 0.47). Among those with cognitive impairment, 79.5% of patients had
social problems (p = 0.001), and 10.3% lived alone (p = 0.038). The results of the study confirm the
presence of dependence and social problems at hospital discharge in a high proportion of chronic
patients. Planning their care can lead to ethical conflicts related to the use of information technologies,
which are destined to promote the patients’ autonomy, and to the social problems associated with
the illness.