[What factors contributed to the higher incidence rate of in-hospital falls at the time of Covid 19? A paradigm shift?]

Igiene e sanita pubblica Pub Date : 2021-09-01
S Amato, A M Lombardi, C Fioravanti, V Gherlo, M Salvagni, M Cerimele
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic has put a strain on all health systems as there has been a growing rapidity in the demand for health care from COVID 19 positive patients in hospitals around the world. With the intensification of the pandemic, determining in real time the consequent needs for health resources (beds, personnel, equipment) has in fact become the fundamental priority for many countries to ensure health services consistent with the health needs expressed by the population. In Italy, the demand has often been satisfied with the conversion of existing beds and the remodeling of the healthcare offer or where the available resources allow it also with the opening of new beds dedicated to pandemic assistance. This work analyzes the falls detected at the time of COVID in patients and hospitalized in direct hospital beds (600 beds) of a Local Health Authority of Lazio (ASL ROMA 2). Although the data on the incidence of falls recorded in the three centers were equal to 2.21 every 1000 days of beds occupied and that the data recorded are lower than those reported in the literature, it is also true that the increase in average hospital stay and the reduction in the rotation rate of beds had an impact on the still low occupancy rates compared to the literature data.The COVID-19 pandemic has put a strain on all health systems as there has been a growing rapidity in the demand for health care from COVID 19 positive patients in hospitals around the world. With the intensification of the pandemic, determining in real time the consequent needs for health resources (beds, personnel, equipment) has in fact become the fundamental priority for many countries to ensure health services consistent with the health needs expressed by the population. In Italy, the demand has often been satisfied with the conversion of existing beds and the remodeling of the healthcare offer or where the available resources allow it also with the opening of new beds dedicated to pandemic assistance. This work analyzes the falls detected at the time of COVID in patients and hospitalized in direct hospital beds (600 beds) of a Local Health Authority of Lazio (ASL ROMA 2). Although the data on the incidence of falls recorded in the three centers were equal to 2.21 every 1000 days of beds occupied and that the data recorded are lower than those reported in the literature, it is also true that the increase in average hospital stay and the reduction in the rotation rate of beds had an impact on the still low occupancy rates compared to the literature data. In fact, the scientific literature shows that in England and Wales, whose national health service is very similar to the Italian one, the falls of patients in hospitals with optimal bed occupancy rates and optimal average hospitalization rates (equal to 4.5 days in general medicine, 3.5 days in general surgery, 3 days in orthopedics) represent the first sentinel event in terms of incidence and frequency, albeit with a very variable damage detection. The average falls is 6.63 falls per 1,000 bed-occupied days, which equates to approximately 1,700 falls per year in an 800-bed hospital with an optimal occupancy rate. Regarding damage, the literature documents that physical injuries and fractures occur in 30-50% of events and fractures occur in 1-3% of cases. The data collected in ASL ROMA 2 have documented that despite the increase in staff dedicated to assistance by 15 - 30%, an increase due to the application of COVID pathways and to the activities of compression of the risk of circulation of the virus among hospitalized patients , the rate of falls has nevertheless increased by 13.5% despite the persistence of standards of quality and safety of patients in care activities, debunking the paradigm that falls can be caused by an undersizing of the care staff and by the possible overcrowding of the emergency departments - urgency.

[是什么因素导致了2019冠状病毒病期间住院跌倒的发生率升高?]范式转变?]
COVID-19大流行给所有卫生系统带来了压力,因为世界各地医院中COVID-19阳性患者对医疗保健的需求不断增加。随着大流行病的加剧,实时确定对卫生资源(床位、人员、设备)的需求实际上已成为许多国家确保卫生服务符合人民表达的卫生需求的基本优先事项。在意大利,这一需求往往通过改造现有床位和改造医疗服务来满足,或者在现有资源允许的情况下,还通过开设专门用于大流行病援助的新床位来满足。这项工作分析了在拉齐奥地方卫生当局(ASL ROMA 2)的直接医院病床(600张病床)中检测到的患者跌倒情况。尽管三个中心记录的跌倒发生率数据等于每1000天占用的床位中有2.21例跌倒,并且记录的数据低于文献报道的数据,与文献数据相比,平均住院时间的增加和床位轮换率的降低也对仍然较低的入住率产生了影响。COVID-19大流行给所有卫生系统带来了压力,因为世界各地医院中COVID-19阳性患者对医疗保健的需求不断增加。随着大流行病的加剧,实时确定对卫生资源(床位、人员、设备)的需求实际上已成为许多国家确保卫生服务符合人民表达的卫生需求的基本优先事项。在意大利,这一需求往往通过改造现有床位和改造医疗服务来满足,或者在现有资源允许的情况下,还通过开设专门用于大流行病援助的新床位来满足。这项工作分析了在拉齐奥地方卫生当局(ASL ROMA 2)的直接医院病床(600张病床)中检测到的患者跌倒情况。尽管三个中心记录的跌倒发生率数据等于每1000天占用的床位中有2.21例跌倒,并且记录的数据低于文献报道的数据,与文献数据相比,平均住院时间的增加和床位轮换率的降低也对仍然较低的入住率产生了影响。事实上,科学文献表明,在英格兰和威尔士,其国民保健服务与意大利非常相似,在床位占用率最高和平均住院率最高的医院(普通内科为4.5天,普通外科为3.5天,骨科为3天),患者摔倒是发病率和频率最高的哨点事件,尽管损伤检测非常不同。平均每1 000个床位占用日发生6.63次跌倒,相当于在一个拥有800个床位的最佳占用率医院每年发生约1 700次跌倒。关于损伤,文献记载30-50%的事件发生物理损伤和骨折,1-3%的病例发生骨折。ASL ROMA 2收集的数据表明,尽管专门提供援助的工作人员增加了15 - 30%,这是由于COVID路径的应用和压缩住院患者中病毒传播风险的活动而增加的,但尽管护理活动中患者的质量和安全标准持续存在,但跌倒率仍增加了13.5%。揭穿这种模式可能是由于护理人员的规模不足和急诊科可能过度拥挤造成的——紧急情况。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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