Literature DB >> 21819030

An inpatient fall prevention initiative in a tertiary care hospital.

Jeffrey Weinberg1, Donna Proske, Anita Szerszen, Karen Lefkovic, Carol Cline, Suzanne El-Sayegh, Mark Jarrett, Kera F Weiserbs.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: In response to increasing inpatient fall rates, which reached 3.9 falls per 1000 inpatient-days in the last quarter of 2005, Staten Island University Hospital, a 714-bed, tertiary care hospital (Staten Island, New York), implemented a fall prevention initiative (FPI). The initiative was intended to decrease inpatient falls and associated injury by institutionalizing staff safety awareness; accountability, and critical thinking; eradicating historically acceptable system failures; and mandating a critical evaluation of safety precautions and application of fall prevention protocol.
METHODS: The intervention included two phases (1) a review phase, in which existing fall prevention efforts were evaluated, and (2) the FPI implementation phase, in which systems were implemented to ensure fall risk assessments, fall incident investigations, identifying and confronting problem issues, planning and adherence to corrective action, and accountability for missed preventive opportunities. For all 1,098,471 inpatient-days of persons aged 18 years and older, with an admission lasting at least one day, between April 2006 and March 2010, data were collected for inpatient falls and fall-associated injuries per 1000 inpatient-days.
RESULTS: Four-year inpatient fall rates decreased by 63.9% (p < .0001); the greatest reduction (72.3%) occurred between the first quarter (Q1) 2005 and Q4 2009. Minor and moderate fall-related injuries significantly decreased by 54.4% and 64.0%, respectively. Two falls with major injury occurred during the study.
CONCLUSIONS: The FPI was associated with a significant reduction in fall and fall-related injury rates. The results suggest that increasing commitment to continuous quality improvement through enhanced safety awareness and accountability contributed to the initiative's success and led to a change of normative behavior and a culture of safety.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21819030     DOI: 10.1016/s1553-7250(11)37040-7

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Jt Comm J Qual Patient Saf        ISSN: 1553-7250


  7 in total

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3.  i Engaging as an innovative approach to engage patients in their own fall prevention care.

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Review 5.  Hospital fall prevention: a systematic review of implementation, components, adherence, and effectiveness.

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6.  Reducing medical-surgical inpatient falls and injuries with videos, icons and alarms.

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7.  Evaluation of a Patient-Centered Fall-Prevention Tool Kit to Reduce Falls and Injuries: A Nonrandomized Controlled Trial.

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