| Literature DB >> 27559476 |
Inderpal Singh1, Justin Okeke1.
Abstract
Inpatient falls (IF) are the most commonly reported safety incidents. The high rate of inpatient falls was reported in a newly built hospital, within Aneurin Bevan University Health Board, Wales (UK). The aim of the project is to reduce the incidence of IF and associated adverse clinical outcomes in a hospital with 100% single rooms. The key mechanism for improvement was education and training of nursing staff around falls risk factors. A Plan-Do-Study-Act methodology was used and a geriatrician-led, systematic nurse training programme on the understanding and correct use of existing multifactorial falls risk assessment (FRA) tool was implemented in April 2013. Pre-training baseline data revealed inadequate falls assessment and low completion rates of the FRA tool. Subsequent, post-training data showed improvement in compliance with all aspects of FRA. Concurrent with nurse training, the actual falls incidence/1000 patient-bed-days fell significantly from the baseline of 18.19±3.46 (Nov 2011-March 2013) to 13.36±2.89 (p<0.001) over next 12 months (April 2013-March 2014) and remained low (mean falls 12.81±2.85) until November 2015. Improved clinical outcomes have been observed in terms of a reduction of length of stay and new care home placements, making total annualised savings of £642,055.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27559476 PMCID: PMC4994097 DOI: 10.1136/bmjquality.u210921.w4741
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Qual Improv Rep ISSN: 2050-1315
Figure 1Baseline statistical process U-control chart displaying incidents of inpatient falls over 10 months.
Figure 2Implementation of final PDSA – Statistical process U-control chart displaying reduced incidents of inpatient falls over 22 months.
Audit on compliance of the FRA tool
| Risk Assessment Compliance | Pre-training | Post-training 1 | Post-training 2 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Falls assessment trigger questions | 69% | 82% | 86% |
| Falls prevention care plan | 47% | 62% | 45% |
| Medication | 52% | 55% | 66% |
| Postural Hypotension | 45% | 53% | 63% |
| Vision | 47% | 51% | 67% |
| Hearing | 50% | 53% | 67% |
| Gait & Balance | 47% | 52% | 69% |
| Continence | 42% | 48% | 66% |
| Environmental Hazard | 39% | 46% | 64% |
| Cognition | 27% | 45% | 57% |
| Osteoporosis | 32% | 27% | 50% |
Figure 3Implementation of final PDSA continued – Statistical process U-control chart displaying reduction in incidence of inpatient falls
Figure 4Statistical process U-control chart displaying sustainable reduction of the incidents of inpatient falls in a time sequence over 4 years
Clinical outcomes for all the in-patient fallers before and after intervention
| Pre-training 17 months data | Post-training 20 months data | P value | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age | 82±10 | 81±10 | 0.02 |
| Sex (females, %) | 51.7 | 54.1 | 0.45 |
| Falls incidents | 1241 | 1108 | N/A |
| Mean falls/1000 patient-bed-days | 18.19±3.46 | 12.66±2.84 | <0.01 |
| Number of patients affected % (n) | 46.9 (491/1046) | 53.1 (555/1046) | N/A |
| Mean falls/in-patient faller | 2.54±3.14 | 1.84±1.72 | <0.01 |
| Recurrent falls: Range | 1-33 | 1-20 | N/A |
| Interquartile range□ | 2 | 1 | N/A |
| Median falls/in-patient faller | 1.00±3.14 | 1.00±1.72 | N/A |
| Own Home % (n) | 50.7% (249/491) | 51.6% (286/555) | 0.67 |
| New Care Home% (n) | 20.5% (87/425) | 17.5% (83/475) | 0.23 |
| All Care Home % (n) | 27.9% (137/491) | 23.5% (130/555) | 0.10 |
| No Fracture% (n) | 96.1% (472/491) | 94.2% (523/555) | 0.15 |
| Non-Hip Fracture% (n) | 2.0% (10/491) | 2.3% (13/555) | 0.12 |
| Hip Fracture% (n) | 1.8% (9/491) | 3.4% (18/555) | 0.11 |
| Mean | 43±39 | 41±36 | 0.7 |
| Median | 34±39 | 32±36 | 0.7 |
| Inter-quartile Range | 41 | 36 | N/A |
| In-patient (IP) | 18.9% (93/491) | 15.7% (87/555) | 0.16 |
| 30-day Post discharge | 8% (32/398) | 4.7% (22/471) | 0.04 |
| 6 months Post discharge | 25.1% (100/398) | 18% (85/471) | 0.01 |