Using a collaborative approach to reduce falls in older people's adult mental health wards in a local health board in Wales.

IF 1.3 Q4 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
Dolores Macchiavello, Paul Gimson, Kerstin Ackermann-Lloyd, Sophie Bassett, Christopher Bevan, Anna Brooks, Melanie Davies, Naomi Elias, Jessica Gapper, Gemma Gash, Andrew Hermolle, Naomi Hill, Caroline Humphreys, Bhuvan Kckhadka, Ana Llewellyn, Bleddyn Marsh, Leah Price, Bethan Rees, Leah Richards, Alison Sproston, Louise Walker, Simon Williams, Zoe Williams, Eleri Wright, Philippa Clark
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Abstract

Between April 2020 and March 2021, the number of fall-related emergency admissions in England for adults over 65 years was 1933 per 100 000 people. Adult patients in hospital may be at risk of falling for many reasons including a history of falls, being medically unwell, dementia or delirium, the effects of their treatment or medication, poor mobility, visual and other sensory impairments along with their general well-being. Research has shown that falls can be reduced by 20%-30% through multifactorial assessments and interventions. The aim of these assessments and interventions is to identify and treat underlying reasons for falls such as muscle weakness, cardiovascular problems, dementia, delirium, incontinence and medication. However, national audits have found low levels of implementation of these assessments and interventions in UK hospitals. As part of a new patient safety improvement initiative, a collaborative was developed to reduce the incidence of in-patient falls rate per 1000 bed days within five older adults' mental health wards in a health board in Wales. The falls collaborative project has resulted in substantial improvements in care, including an increase of patients receiving lying and standing blood pressure assessment, medication review and delirium assessments. While reported falls rates stayed the same for the five wards, when each ward individually was factored in, we saw a reduction in two wards and estimated that the increase in falls for the remaining of three wards was related to a previous state of under-reporting, considering the numbers stayed levelled throughout the collaborative. The small reduction we saw was achieved without any extra support or allocated resources, and the ongoing staffing challenges all five wards experienced throughout the collaborative, all these improvements were received as a great success. The team was shortlisted for the National Health Service Wales Awards in the Safe Care category, something they took great pride in.

在威尔士地方卫生委员会,采用合作方式减少老年人成人心理健康病房的跌倒情况。
在2020年4月至2021年3月期间,英格兰65岁以上成年人与秋季相关的急诊入院人数为每10万人1933人。住院的成年患者可能有跌倒的风险,原因有很多,包括跌倒史、身体不适、痴呆或谵妄、治疗或药物的影响、行动不便、视觉和其他感觉障碍,以及他们的总体健康状况。研究表明,通过多因素评估和干预,跌倒可减少20%-30%。这些评估和干预的目的是确定和治疗跌倒的潜在原因,如肌肉无力、心血管问题、痴呆、谵妄、大小便失禁和药物。然而,国家审计发现,这些评估和干预措施在英国医院的实施水平很低。作为一项新的改善病人安全倡议的一部分,制定了一项合作计划,以减少威尔士卫生委员会五个老年人精神健康病房内每1000个病床日住院病人跌倒的发生率。falls合作项目大大改善了护理,包括增加了接受躺卧和站立血压评估、药物审查和谵妄评估的患者。虽然报告的跌倒率在五个病房保持不变,但当每个病房单独考虑时,我们看到两个病房减少了,并估计其余三个病房的跌倒率增加与之前的低报状态有关,考虑到整个合作期间的数字保持不变。我们看到,在没有任何额外支持或分配资源的情况下实现了小幅度的减少,并且在整个合作过程中,所有五个病房都经历了持续的人员配备挑战,所有这些改进都被视为巨大的成功。该团队入围了威尔士国家卫生服务奖的安全护理类别,这是他们引以为傲的事情。
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来源期刊
BMJ Open Quality
BMJ Open Quality Nursing-Leadership and Management
CiteScore
2.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
226
审稿时长
20 weeks
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