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Fall Prevention in Acute Care Hospitals

353

Citations

23

References

2010

Year

TLDR

Falls are a leading cause of injury and death, especially among older adults, and hospitalization further elevates this risk, yet short‑stay hospital fall‑prevention strategies lack supporting evidence. This study aimed to determine whether a health‑information‑technology–based fall prevention tool kit (FPTK) could reduce patient falls in acute‑care units. The FPTK used a nurse‑completed fall‑risk assessment to tailor interventions, generating bed posters, patient education handouts, and care‑plan alerts that were integrated into existing communication workflows. Across four urban hospitals, the FPTK lowered fall rates from 4.18 to 3.15 per 1,000 patient‑days (P = .04), with a greater effect in patients 65 years or older, while fall‑related injuries were unchanged.

Abstract

<h3>Context</h3>Falls cause injury and death for persons of all ages, but risk of falls increases markedly with age. Hospitalization further increases risk, yet no evidence exists to support short-stay hospital-based fall prevention strategies to reduce patient falls.<h3>Objective</h3>To investigate whether a fall prevention tool kit (FPTK) using health information technology (HIT) decreases patient falls in hospitals.<h3>Design, Setting, and Patients</h3>Cluster randomized study conducted January 1, 2009, through June 30, 2009, comparing patient fall rates in 4 urban US hospitals in units that received usual care (4 units and 5104 patients) or the intervention (4 units and 5160 patients).<h3>Intervention</h3>The FPTK integrated existing communication and workflow patterns into the HIT application. Based on a valid fall risk assessment scale completed by a nurse, the FPTK software tailored fall prevention interventions to address patients' specific determinants of fall risk. The FPTK produced bed posters composed of brief text with an accompanying icon, patient education handouts, and plans of care, all communicating patient-specific alerts to key stakeholders.<h3>Main Outcome Measures</h3>The primary outcome was patient falls per 1000 patient-days adjusted for site and patient care unit. A secondary outcome was fall-related injuries.<h3>Results</h3>During the 6-month intervention period, the number of patients with falls differed between control (n = 87) and intervention (n = 67) units (P=.02). Site-adjusted fall rates were significantly higher in control units (4.18 [95% confidence interval {CI}, 3.45-5.06] per 1000 patient-days) than in intervention units (3.15 [95% CI, 2.54-3.90] per 1000 patient-days; P = .04). The FPTK was found to be particularly effective with patients aged 65 years or older (adjusted rate difference, 2.08 [95% CI, 0.61-3.56] per 1000 patient-days; P = .003). No significant effect was noted in fall-related injuries.<h3>Conclusion</h3>The use of a fall prevention tool kit in hospital units compared with usual care significantly reduced rate of falls.<h3>Trial Registration</h3>clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00675935

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