| Literature DB >> 33836734 |
Karolina Krakau1, Helene Andersson2,3, Åsa Franzén Dahlin4,5, Louise Egberg2,6, Eila Sterner7,8, Maria Unbeck7,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In-hospital fall incidents are common and sensitive to nursing care. It is therefore important to have easy access to valid patient data to evaluate and follow-up nursing care. The aim of the study was to validate the nursing documentation, using a specific term in the registered nurses´ (RNs´) discharge note, regarding inpatient falls according to the outcome of a digitalized data extraction tool and the discharge note itself.Entities:
Keywords: Documentation; Fall; Nursing; Patient safety; Quality indicator
Year: 2021 PMID: 33836734 PMCID: PMC8034134 DOI: 10.1186/s12912-021-00577-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Nurs ISSN: 1472-6955
Sample groups, selection criteria and numbers of episodes of care in total and reviewed
| Group | Selection criteria for each episode of care during 2016 when using a data extraction tool | Total episodes of care, study populations | Reviewed episodes of care, study sample groups |
|---|---|---|---|
| A | • No nursing discharge note is used | 98 | 98 (100) |
| B | • Nursing discharge note is used • No documentation on the term “falls during current episode of care” | 310 | 233 (75.2) |
| C | • Nursing discharge note is used • The term “falls during current episode of care” has been used • The predefined answer | 30,495 | 233 (0.8) |
| D | • Nursing discharge note is used • The term “falls during current episode of care” has been used • The predefined answer | 499 | 499 (100) |
| E | • Nursing discharge note is used • The term “falls during current episode of care” has been used • The predefined answer | 169 | 169 (100) |
| Total | 31,571 | 1232 (3.9) |
Demographics for 1232 patients and episodes of care
| Sex, n (%) | |
| Men | 677 (55.0) |
| Women | 555 (45.0) |
| Age, median age in years (range) | 74 (15–102) |
| Type of admission, n (%) | |
| Acute admission | 1046 (84.9%) |
| Elective admission | 179 (14.5%) |
| Unknown | 7 (0.6%) |
| Length of stay, median days (range) | 5 (1–117) |
Fig. 1Episodes of care with at least one fall captured via the three data detection methods
Positive predictive values regarding presence of any fall in the respective episodes of care in the sample groups D and E
| PPV, % | |
|---|---|
| D - Falls without injury according to the term | 88.4 |
| E - Falls with injury according to the term | 84.6 |
| Total | 87.4 |
| D - Falls without injury according to the term | 91.9 |
| E - Falls with injury according to the term | 90.5 |
| Total | 91.5 |
Potential causes of error regarding fall outcome in the groups D and E
| Potential causes of error | Number (%) of episodes of care with a potential error |
|---|---|
| 1. The registered nurses documented a fall in the fall term in the nursing discharge note but no documented evidence for that could be found during the respective episode of care when reviewing the record | 30 (4.5) |
| 2. The registered nurses correctly documented that no fall had occurred during the respective episode of care, i.e. it was an error in the data extraction tool | 27 (4.0) |
| 3. The registered nurses documented a fall that occurred at an episode of care just before the sampled one, i.e. the patient was still in the hospital, but it was another episode of care before the current | 8 (1.2) |
| 4. The registered nurses documented a fall that occurred before arrival to the hospital | 6 (0.9) |
| 5. The registered nurses had chosen two alternatives in the fall term, both fall without injury and no fall, none of these patients had any fall | 6 (0.9) |
| 6. The registered nurses had included fall at the emergency department that is not part of the current episode of care | 3 (0.4) |
| 7. The episode of care did not have a discharge note and the extraction tool took information from the direct previous episode of care | 3 (0.4) |
| 8. Fall in the patient’s own home during leave (still admitted) | 1 (0.1) |
| Total | 84 (12.6) |