| Literature DB >> 28207841 |
Darshini R Ayton1, Anna L Barker1, Renata T Morello1, Caroline A Brand1, Jason Talevski1, Fiona S Landgren2, Mayer M Melhem1, Evelyn Bian1, Sandra G Brauer3, Keith D Hill4, Patricia M Livingston5, Mari Botti6.
Abstract
Evidence for effective falls prevention interventions in acute wards is limited. One reason for this may be suboptimal program implementation. This study aimed to identify perceived barriers and enablers of the implementation of the 6-PACK falls prevention program to inform the implementation in a randomised controlled trial. Strategies to optimise successful implementation of 6-PACK were also sought. A mixed-methods approach was applied in 24 acute wards from 6 Australian hospitals. Participants were nurses working on participating wards and senior hospital staff including Nurse Unit Managers; senior physicians; Directors of Nursing; and senior personnel involved in quality and safety or falls prevention. Information on barriers and enablers of 6-PACK implementation was obtained through surveys, focus groups and interviews. Questions reflected the COM-B framework that includes three behaviour change constructs of: capability, opportunity and motivation. Focus group and interview data were analysed thematically, and survey data descriptively. The survey response rate was 60% (420/702), and 12 focus groups (n = 96 nurses) and 24 interviews with senior staff were conducted. Capability barriers included beliefs that falls could not be prevented; and limited knowledge on falls prevention in patients with complex care needs (e.g. cognitive impairment). Capability enablers included education and training, particularly face to face case study based approaches. Lack of resources was identified as an opportunity barrier. Leadership, champions and using data to drive practice change were recognised as opportunity enablers. Motivation barriers included complacency and lack of ownership in falls prevention efforts. Motivation enablers included senior staff articulating clear goals and a commitment to falls prevention; and use of reminders, audits and feedback. The information gained from this study suggests that regular practical face-to-face education and training for nurses; provision of equipment; audit, reminders and feedback; leadership and champions; and the provision of falls data is key to successful falls prevention program implementation in acute hospitals.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28207841 PMCID: PMC5313144 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0171932
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Mapping of survey, focus group and interview questions to the COM-B domains [11].
| Survey | Focus group | Interview | Questions/Statements |
|---|---|---|---|
| ✓ | ✓ | What strategies would you recommend we use when implementing the 6-PACK program? Why? | |
| ✓ | ✓ | What learning can we take from other program implementation experiences on your ward? What were some of the barriers? What would you do differently next time? What worked well? | |
| ✓ | You can’t stop older people from falling. | ||
| ✓ | ✓ | Do you believe falls can be prevented? What interventions do you feel are most important? | |
| ✓ | ✓ | Who are the critical people that need to be involved in falls prevention activities at your hospital? | |
| ✓ | ✓ | What strategies/factors would you consider to be essential to sustaining programs like the 6-PACK? Please explain. | |
| ✓ | What falls prevention activities are currently occurring/or planned for the hospital? Do you perceive these activities to be complementary or inhibitory to the 6-PACK implementation on the intervention wards? Please explain. | ||
| ✓ | Who should we involve in the processes of implementing the 6-PACK this hospital? What do you see their role will be? How do you rate the relative importance of these individuals or group in terms of making the implementation successful? | ||
| ✓ | Who do you anticipate may be obstructive/resistive to the implementation of 6-PACK? Why? (Knowledge, beliefs and skills? Attitudes and opinions? Conflicting demands?) What strategies do you recommend to better engage these people? (Incentives and motivators?) What strategies do you recommend to inform/approach/involve key staff in the change process? | ||
| ✓ | What system level barriers do you feel may exist to implementing the 6-PACK program? E.g. Equipment and staffing resources, communication, leadership and teamwork, environmental constraints (e.g. budgets, redevelopments, restructuring) | ||
| ✓ | Leadership and supervision for falls prevention practice. | ||
| ✓ | An active falls prevention leader is essential for falls prevention programs to be successful on my ward. | ||
| ✓ | This feedback [about how I use falls prevention interventions] helps me use falls prevention interventions more effectively. | ||
| ✓ | ✓ | What effect do you feel audit, feedback and reminders will have on the effectiveness of the 6-PACK program implementation? Can you provide examples of when these have been effectively used previously? | |
| ✓ | There are more important things I should do than falls prevention interventions for my high falls risk patients. | ||
| ✓ | Incident reporting provides us with a way of measuring how we are going with patient falls. | ||
| ✓ | It is not my responsibility to stop patients from falling. | ||
Mapping of barrier and enabler themes to COM-B domains.
| COM-B domain | Theme | |
|---|---|---|
| Capability | Barrier | • Management of complex patients (N) |
| Enabler | • Training and education (N and SS) | |
| Opportunity | Barrier | • Lack of resources (N) |
| Enabler | • Use of falls data (SS) | |
| Motivation | Barrier | • Lack of ownership (SS) |
| Enabler | • Goal to reduce falls (SS) | |
N = nurses, SS = senior staff
Strategies to optimise successful implementation of the 6-PACK program
| COM-B domain | Rationale | Implementation strategy |
|---|---|---|
| Capability | • Improve knowledge and skills | • Regular practical face-to-face education and training for nurses (ward walk arounds, small interactive group sessions) |
| Opportunity | • Provide and discuss data | • Provision of falls data |
| Motivation | • Reinforce key strategies for falls prevention | • Compliance audits |