| Literature DB >> 32293443 |
Hardeep Singh1,2, Heather M Flett1,3, Michelle P Silver4, B Catharine Craven1,2,4,5, Susan B Jaglal1,2,3,4, Kristin E Musselman6,7,8.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Preventing patient falls is a priority in tertiary spinal cord injury (SCI) rehabilitation. Falls can result in patient or staff injury, delayed rehabilitation, and hospital liability. A comprehensive overview of fall prevention/management policies and procedures in Canadian SCI rehabilitation is currently lacking. We describe and compare the fall prevention/management policies and procedures implemented in Canadian tertiary hospitals that provide SCI rehabilitation.Entities:
Keywords: Document analysis; Fall prevention; Rehabilitation; Spinal cord injuries
Year: 2020 PMID: 32293443 PMCID: PMC7157992 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-020-05168-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Description of facility structure and number of fall prevention documents provided
| Code | Facility structure | Number of documents provided |
|---|---|---|
| Site A | Free-standing academic SCI rehabilitation facility | 3 |
| Site B | SCI program imbedded in Health Sciences Centre | 6 |
| Site C | Free-standing academic neurologic rehabilitation facility | 5 |
| Site D | Free-standing academic rehabilitation hospital with regional SCI program | 9 |
| Site E | Spinal cord injury program imbedded in City Hospital | 3 |
| Site F | Free-standing academic rehabilitation Hospital with SCI program | 2 |
Fig. 1Similarities and differences in the pre-fall, communication, and post-fall policies and procedures in Canadian tertiary hospitals that provide SCI rehabilitation
Description of fall risk assessment tools used in SCI rehabilitation settings. Column three represents the maximum score (a high score infers a higher fall risk). The thresholds for assigning fall risk based on the scores are specified in column four
| Scale Name | Domains Evaluated | Maximum Score | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|---|
| STRATIFY [ | recent falls, agitation, vision, toileting frequency, transfers and mobility | 6 | 0 = low fall risk 1 = medium fall risk 2 + = high fall risk |
| Schmid Fall Risk Assessment Tool [ | mobility, mentation, elimination, prior fall history and current medications, agitation, attempting to get out of bed unsafely, vision, orthostatic hypotension, balance and sensory issues, history of fractures or osteoporosis, alcohol/substance abuse and malnutrition | 5 | 0–2 = normal fall risk ≥3 = high fall risk |
| Morse Fall Scale [ | fall history, secondary diagnosis, ambulatory aid, IV, gait/transfers, and cognition | 125 | 0–24 = low fall risk 25–44 = moderate fall risk ≥45 = high fall risk |
| Customized Scale Site D | history of falls, medication, dizziness, sensory impairments, toileting, cognitive impairments, balance/mobility issues, co-morbidities, bed transfers/mobility, mobility in patient room, bathroom and on the unit, and behavioural traits (e.g. judgement, self-control/impulsivity, anxiety) | Yes or No scale | Any yes answer requires development of a plan |
| Customized Scale Site E | neuromuscular deficits, cognition, sensory deficits, bowel/bladder, postural hypotension, history of seizures | 17 | 0 = low fall risk ≥1 = high fall risk |
Customized Scale Site F *based on the Morse fall scale | number of diagnoses, vision, toileting, medication, mobility, and cognition | 100 | 0–64 = low fall risk ≥65 = high fall risk |
Fall prevention precautions cited in fall prevention/management documents at each site
Grey shading indicates which site specified the fall prevention precaution in the documents provided. No shading indicates that the site did not specify the fall prevention precaution in the provided fall prevention documents
O2 oxygen, IV intravenous