PURPOSETo describe patients' functional health, symptom distress, and recovery at home across a fasttrack perioperative experience.METHODSA nonexperimental, descriptive, correlational design using pre/post test measures and openended questions captured the fast‐tracking experience. A convenience sample included 77 patients entering the same‐day surgery unit to undergo arthroscopy with general anesthesia and planned fast‐track recovery. In the preadmission test area, patients were asked by a nurse to participate in the study. If they agreed and met selection criteria, a nurse completed a demographic sheet, the Foster and Jones Functional Health Pattern Assessment Screeing Tool (FHPAST), and the Symptom Distress Scale (SDS).On the evening of surgery, a nurse called the patient to review the SDS to be completed by phone. At 72 hours after surgery, the FHPAST, the SDS, and a 72‐hour open‐ended questionnaire were administered to understand the patient experience of fast‐tracking.FINDINGSAt 12 hours nurses reported patients were “euphoric” and it was difficult to imagine pain or other symptoms. Some patients complained of nausea and fatigue. Most patients had family present. At 72 hours patients described unmet expectations, fatigue, immobility, ineffective pain management, sleep disturbance, and nausea. Interventions included teaching, coaching, and reassurance. Some patients continued to have nursing problems at 72 hours and benefited from a telephone follow‐up call.CONCLUSIONSPreliminary results suggest that nursing diagnoses, interventions, and outcomes can be used to describe patient responses to the fast‐track experience. Results indicate a need for practice changes to include innovative models and further research to measure outcomes. Fast‐tracking can be effective, but requires clinical reasoning by nurses to guide the individual's healing. A coaching intervention seems to enhance patient satisfaction and a sense of being cared for.