| Literature DB >> 36175035 |
Kalpana Chhetri1, Ugyen Rinchen2, Gitanjali Lamichaney2, Bhutan Kinley2, Sangay Dorji2.
Abstract
Falls are common and preventable adverse events that occur in a hospital setting. Falls can cause pain, damage, increase cost and mistrust in the health system. Inpatient fall is a multifactorial event which can be reduced with multistrategic interventions.In this project, we aimed to reduce the fall rate in paediatric ward of Jigme Dorji Wangchuck National Referral Hospital, Bhutan by 25% from the baseline over a period of 6 months by focusing on fall risk assessment, staff education on fall prevention measures and devoting more attention to patients at high risk of fall.We tested three sets of interventions using the Plan-Do-Study-Act approach. For the first cycle, emphasis was on staff education in terms of proper use of fall risk assessment form, risk categorisation and fall prevention advice. In the second cycle, in addition to the first we introduced the 'high risk of fall package' and the third cycle focused on early and easy identification of high-risk patients by continuous fall risk assessment and use of high risk of fall sticker.We observed that at the start of the quality improvement project despite our intervention the fall rate of our ward went up but as we continued adding more ideas focusing on high risk patients, we could achieve a fall reduction of 49.3% from the base line by end of third cycle. Our ward saw fall free days of almost 90 days at the end of project.We conclude that inpatient falls occur due to multiple factors therefore a multi-pronged strategy is needed to prevent it. One of the prime preventive strategy is identifying patients who are at high risk of fall and concentrating attention to those patients. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2022. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: PDSA; healthcare quality improvement; paediatrics; patient safety; quality improvement
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36175035 PMCID: PMC9528595 DOI: 10.1136/bmjoq-2022-001892
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open Qual ISSN: 2399-6641
Figure 1Fish bone analysis and targeted intervention.
Figure 2Run chart showing the fall incident rate by month. PDSA: plan-do –study-act.
Figure 3High risk of fall sticker used on a patient's bed.
Intervention package for ‘high risk of fall’ patients
| Sl. no | Interventions |
| 1 | To provide bed with side rails to patients who are at high risk of fall. |
| 2 | To shift high risk patients nearer to nursing stations so that nurses can keep an eye on them. |
| 3 | To have frequent rounding (two hourly) by nursing staffs for high risk patients. |
| 4 | To have a system of handing over of high-risk patients during nursing shift change. |
First PDSA cycle (July 2021)
| What | Rationale | Who | |
| Plan |
To educate Staffs on proper use of paediatric fall assessment form (Humpty Dumpty fall chart) and fall risk categorisation and fall prevention advice after risk assessment | Root cause analysis highlighted that there was no uniformity in the use of fall risk assessment form, documentation and the fall prevention advice given. | QI team |
| Do |
Humpty dumpty fall chart were printed out and staffs were educated to use it in a uniform way and to document the risk category in patient file One hour presentation was given to the ward staffs and paediatric residents covering fall prevention advices to be given to the patient and their attendants | QI team | |
| Study |
The fall incident rate for July was studied. There was no decline in the fall incidence rate Patient’s charts were reviewed Lack of attention to patients at high risk of fall was identified as one of the cause of inpatient falls in our ward | QI team | |
| Act |
Called a meeting with all the QI members Reviewed all the fall incidents form Discussed about interventions which can help in providing special/extra attention to high risk of fall patients. | QI team |
QI, quality improvement.
Third PDSA cycle (October 2021)
| What | Rationale/remarks | Who | |
| Plan |
Planned to use a ‘high risk of fall’ sticker on high risk patient’s beds for easy identification and attention. To have more frequent fall risk assessment for patients (on admission, on transfer in from other unit, warding in from operation theatre and whenever there is a major change in patient’s condition) | Rationale for plan 1. Though the idea of giving due attention to ‘high risk of fall’ patients was already put in place, we lacked an easy way of identifying those patient. Using the ‘high risk of fall’ sticker/signage on patient’s bed would help in easy identification of those patients. | QI team |
| Do |
Carrying out fall risk assessment on admission, on transfer in from other units, while warding in from operation theatre and on major change in patient’s condition was implemented A ‘Humpty Dumpty high risk of fall’ sticker was designed and printed out by the QI team members Nurses started using the ‘high risk of fall’ sticker on high risk patient’s beds ( | Nurses on duty | |
| Study |
There was no fall in the month of October. The average fall incidence from July to October was 2.35/1000 patient-days | QI team | |
| Act |
As the above change ideas brought in a significant reduction in the in fall incidence we acted on sustaining the above new ideas | QI teams |
QI, quality improvement.
Second PDSA cycle (August 2021)
| What | Rationale/remarks | Who | |
| Plan |
To continue with the first intervention (used in the first PDSA cycle) and in addition planned for the following To pay more attention to patients at high risk of fall by introducing a ‘high-risk package’ interventions ( | Rationale—The time duration for first change idea was just 1 month so we wanted to give it some more time. | QI team |
| Do |
Proper use of fall risk assessment tool (Humpty Dumpty chart), risk categorisation and fall prevention advices were continued. Staffs were familiarised with ‘high risk of fall’ package and it was implemented. | QI team members and Ward staffs | |
| Study |
The fall incident rate for August was studied Proper and correct use of Humpty Dumpty fall scale for all admitted patients and use of ‘high risk of fall package’ for high risk patients brought down the fall rate by about 28% from the baseline. Despite a decline in the fall rate there were few challenges encountered in implementation of ‘high-risk fall package’ (our ward did not have enough beds with side rails) | Remarks: Lack of enough beds with side rails was a challenge which this QI project had difficulty in addressing | QI team |
| Act |
Meeting of the QI members for way forward. With almost 28% reduction in fall rate from the baseline, we planned to carry forward the above new ideas for the month of September | QI teams |
QI, quality improvement.