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Do portable nursing stations within bays of hospital wards reduce the rate of inpatient falls? An interrupted time-series analysis

BACKGROUND: falls can negatively affect patients, resulting in loss of independence and functional decline and have substantial healthcare costs. Hospitals are a high-risk falls environment and regularly introduce, but seldom evaluate, policies to reduce inpatient falls. This study evaluated whether...

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Autores principales: Ali, U M, Judge, A, Foster, C, Brooke, A, James, K, Marriott, T, Lamb, S E
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6201822/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30010697
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ageing/afy097
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author Ali, U M
Judge, A
Foster, C
Brooke, A
James, K
Marriott, T
Lamb, S E
author_facet Ali, U M
Judge, A
Foster, C
Brooke, A
James, K
Marriott, T
Lamb, S E
author_sort Ali, U M
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: falls can negatively affect patients, resulting in loss of independence and functional decline and have substantial healthcare costs. Hospitals are a high-risk falls environment and regularly introduce, but seldom evaluate, policies to reduce inpatient falls. This study evaluated whether introducing portable nursing stations in ward bays to maximise nurse–patient contact time reduced inpatient falls. METHODS: inpatient falls data from local hospital incident reporting software (Datix) were collected monthly (April 2014–December 2017) from 17 wards in Stoke Mandeville and Wycombe General Hospitals, the UK. Portable nursing stations were introduced in bays on these wards from April 2016. We used a natural experimental study design and interrupted time series analysis to evaluate changes in fall rates, measured by the monthly rate of falls per 1000 occupied bed days (OBDs). RESULTS: the wards reported 2875 falls (April 2014–December 2017). The fallers’ mean age was 78 (SD = 13) and 58% (1624/2817) were men. Most falls, 99.41% (2858/2875), resulted in none, low or moderate harm, 0.45% (13/2875) in severe harm and 0.14% (4/2875) in death. The monthly falls rate increased by 0.119 per 1000 OBDs (95% CI: 0.045, 0.194; P = 0.002) before April 2016, then decreased by 0.222 per 1000 OBDs (95% CI: −0.350, −0.093; P = 0.001) until December 2017. At 12 months post-intervention, the absolute difference between the estimated post-intervention trend and pre-intervention projected estimate was 2.84 falls per 1000 OBDs, a relative reduction of 26.71%. CONCLUSION: portable nursing stations were associated with lower monthly falls rates and could reduce inpatient falls across the NHS.
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spelling pubmed-62018222018-10-30 Do portable nursing stations within bays of hospital wards reduce the rate of inpatient falls? An interrupted time-series analysis Ali, U M Judge, A Foster, C Brooke, A James, K Marriott, T Lamb, S E Age Ageing Research Paper BACKGROUND: falls can negatively affect patients, resulting in loss of independence and functional decline and have substantial healthcare costs. Hospitals are a high-risk falls environment and regularly introduce, but seldom evaluate, policies to reduce inpatient falls. This study evaluated whether introducing portable nursing stations in ward bays to maximise nurse–patient contact time reduced inpatient falls. METHODS: inpatient falls data from local hospital incident reporting software (Datix) were collected monthly (April 2014–December 2017) from 17 wards in Stoke Mandeville and Wycombe General Hospitals, the UK. Portable nursing stations were introduced in bays on these wards from April 2016. We used a natural experimental study design and interrupted time series analysis to evaluate changes in fall rates, measured by the monthly rate of falls per 1000 occupied bed days (OBDs). RESULTS: the wards reported 2875 falls (April 2014–December 2017). The fallers’ mean age was 78 (SD = 13) and 58% (1624/2817) were men. Most falls, 99.41% (2858/2875), resulted in none, low or moderate harm, 0.45% (13/2875) in severe harm and 0.14% (4/2875) in death. The monthly falls rate increased by 0.119 per 1000 OBDs (95% CI: 0.045, 0.194; P = 0.002) before April 2016, then decreased by 0.222 per 1000 OBDs (95% CI: −0.350, −0.093; P = 0.001) until December 2017. At 12 months post-intervention, the absolute difference between the estimated post-intervention trend and pre-intervention projected estimate was 2.84 falls per 1000 OBDs, a relative reduction of 26.71%. CONCLUSION: portable nursing stations were associated with lower monthly falls rates and could reduce inpatient falls across the NHS. Oxford University Press 2018-11 2018-07-16 /pmc/articles/PMC6201822/ /pubmed/30010697 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ageing/afy097 Text en © The Author(s) 2018. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Geriatrics Society. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Research Paper
Ali, U M
Judge, A
Foster, C
Brooke, A
James, K
Marriott, T
Lamb, S E
Do portable nursing stations within bays of hospital wards reduce the rate of inpatient falls? An interrupted time-series analysis
title Do portable nursing stations within bays of hospital wards reduce the rate of inpatient falls? An interrupted time-series analysis
title_full Do portable nursing stations within bays of hospital wards reduce the rate of inpatient falls? An interrupted time-series analysis
title_fullStr Do portable nursing stations within bays of hospital wards reduce the rate of inpatient falls? An interrupted time-series analysis
title_full_unstemmed Do portable nursing stations within bays of hospital wards reduce the rate of inpatient falls? An interrupted time-series analysis
title_short Do portable nursing stations within bays of hospital wards reduce the rate of inpatient falls? An interrupted time-series analysis
title_sort do portable nursing stations within bays of hospital wards reduce the rate of inpatient falls? an interrupted time-series analysis
topic Research Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6201822/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30010697
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ageing/afy097
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