| Literature DB >> 30075774 |
Jeannine Liddle1, Meryl Lovarini2, Lindy Clemson2, Lynette Mackenzie2, Amy Tan2, Sabrina W Pit3, Roslyn Poulos4, Anne Tiedemann5, Catherine Sherrington5, Chris Roberts6, Karen Willis7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: While there is strong evidence that fall prevention interventions can prevent falls in people aged 65 and over, translating evidence into routine practice is challenging. Research regarding how allied health professionals (AHPs) respond to this challenge is limited. As part of the Integrated Solutions for Sustainable Fall Prevention (iSOLVE) project, this study aimed to explore how AHPs were making fall prevention practice routine in primary care and the factors that influenced their fall prevention practice.Entities:
Keywords: Allied health; Implementation; Inter-professional collaboration; Qualitative methods
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30075774 PMCID: PMC6091062 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-018-3414-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Sample interview questions
| Example questions | |
|---|---|
| - Can you describe to me the current practice settings you work in? | |
| - How well does fall prevention fit into your everyday practice? | |
| - How do clients respond to the fall prevention work you do with them? | |
| - Having gone to the workshops, what, if anything, are you doing differently? | |
| - How have you worked with colleagues to implement changes in practice? | |
| - Can you tell me about anything you would have liked to have implemented from the workshops but you haven’t been able to? | |
| - Is there anything else you’d like to say about fall prevention, the workshops or the iSOLVE project before we finish the interview? |
Fig. 1Major themes – Process of AHPs integrating fall prevention into routine practice
Strategies for integrating fall prevention into routine practice
| Strategies | Example quotes |
|---|---|
| Ask every client about falls | “Every patient we consider it ... it’s a standard question we ask everyone whether they come in for neck pain, shoulder pain or if they’ve had a hip replacement, we ask everyone their falls history.” (Private physiotherapist, ID11) |
| Be alert to falls as a common issue relevant to many clients | “I’d say about half of them have been admitted because of a fall ... usually they’ve had an injury ... they’ve had a long hospital stay and they’re deconditioned and their mobility is reduced and they don’t have the confidence now ... so everyday I’m probably addressing falls in some kind of way in the community.” (Public AHP, ID8) |
| Have processes in place for assessing clients for risk of falls | “Some of them specifically come in for the [fall prevention] program, but others will come in with ... say a musculoskeletal impairment and then during assessment I will identify that there is also a balance component in it or a risk of falls because of other components that they’ve got.” (Private physiotherapist, ID10) |
| Have structured programs in place for working with clients on fall prevention | “… this is a simple exercise program ... we might not use every exercise with every patient but we’re aiming for them to do the whole program.” (Private podiatrist, ID5) |
Perceptions of the influence of the iSOLVE workshops on practice
| Example quotes | |
|---|---|
| “… having been to the workshops I’m much more likely now to say, right we’re going to really look at the circumstances of this fall and look at what really caused it and look at how we can prevent it.” (Private OT, ID12) | |
| “... [I’m] making sure there’s as much dynamic balance exercises as possible and incorporating it more into everyday life, using little strategies that we went through, like turning when the kettle’s boiling, standing on one leg, or doing some side stepping exercises, little things like that, trying to get people to change habits.” (Public AHP, ID8) | |
| “What I found really helpful was some of that research about how it’s balance exercise and lower limb strengthening exercises that shows an improvement in balance and reduction in falls ... that’s made me focus more on that, because that’s where the research is, so that’s where my practice needs to be as well.” (Private EP, ID2) | |
| “It’s just a matter of getting the program up and running and ... slot it in as an appointment type ... and that’s when we can integrate the falls prevention program ... we don’t have the foot exerciser, but we are using the marbles, foot movements and the Thera-Band®... and I’m printing out a list of things for the patient to do, giving them the link to [the] video. We’ve now got two CDs that we can lend to people, so we are actually doing it, which is good.” (Private podiatrist, ID5) |