Outpatient Oncology Fall Risk: A Quality Improvement Project.

Kansas journal of medicine Pub Date : 2023-08-24 eCollection Date: 2023-01-01 DOI:10.17161/kjm.vol16.20271
Stephanie Hammontree, Maryellen Potts, Adam Neiberger, Danielle Olds, Daniel English, Jamie S Myers
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Abstract

Introduction: Patients receiving cancer treatment are at high risk for falls. No current guidelines or standards of care exist for assessment and prevention of outpatient oncology falls. This quality improvement project's purpose was to 1) describe and evaluate outpatient oncology falls data to determine root cause(s), and develop, implement, and evaluate intervention strategies for future policy refinement, and 2) compare fall rates pre/post implementation of a system-wide Ambulatory Fall Risk Bundle.

Methods: Retrospective data were used to describe and categorize fall incidence for the University of Kansas Cancer Center over 12 months. Further analyses were conducted to describe fall rates per 10,000 kept appointments pre/post implementation of an Ambulatory Fall Risk Bundle protocol. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with medical assistants and nurse managers to evaluate the initiative's impact, staff satisfaction, and recommendations for refinement.

Results: The initial 12-month assessment yielded 58 patient falls retained for further analyses. Most patients were receiving chemotherapy (46, 79%). Common contributing symptoms included dizziness/ faintness and weakness (25, 43%). Tripping/falling over a hazard (12, 24%) and falls during transfer (10, 5.8%) also were cited. Subsequent analyses of fall rates indicated no change. Recommendations resulting from the qualitative interviews included: orthostatic vital sign protocol implementation, redesign of the electronic medical record fall risk alert, stakeholder involvement in protocol development, staff training, and related patient education strategies, and the procurement of additional assistive devices/equipment.

Conclusions: System-related policy and culture change, investment in physical and human resource enhancements, and evidence-based protocols are needed to improve outpatient oncology fall rates.

Abstract Image

肿瘤门诊跌倒风险:一个质量改进项目。
简介:接受癌症治疗的患者跌倒的风险很高。目前还没有评估和预防门诊肿瘤学跌倒的指导方针或护理标准。该质量改进项目的目的是1)描述和评估门诊肿瘤学跌倒数据,以确定根本原因,并制定、实施和评估未来政策完善的干预策略,2)比较全系统动态跌倒风险捆绑包实施前/实施后的跌倒率。方法:回顾性数据用于描述和分类堪萨斯大学癌症中心12个月内的跌倒发病率。进行了进一步的分析,以描述门诊跌倒风险捆绑协议实施前/实施后每10000个预约的跌倒率。对医疗助理和护士经理进行了半结构化访谈,以评估该举措的影响、员工满意度和改进建议。结果:最初的12个月评估产生了58例患者跌倒,保留下来进行进一步分析。大多数患者正在接受化疗(46.79%)。常见的症状包括头晕/昏厥和虚弱(25,43%)。还列举了因危险而绊倒/坠落(12.24%)和在转移过程中摔倒(10.58%)。随后对下降率的分析表明没有变化。定性访谈提出的建议包括:立位生命体征方案的实施、电子病历跌倒风险警报的重新设计、利益相关者参与方案制定、员工培训和相关患者教育策略,以及额外辅助设备/设备的采购,需要在物理和人力资源增强方面进行投资,并制定循证方案,以提高门诊肿瘤学下降率。
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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