An epidemiological study of falls on integrated general medical wards.

Vassallo, M., Azeem, T., Pirwani, M.F., Sharma, J. C. and Allen, S. C., 2000. An epidemiological study of falls on integrated general medical wards. International journal of clinical practice, 54 (10), pp. 654-657.

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Official URL: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/11221278

Abstract

Reducing falls in hospital requires an environmental as well as a patient-orientated approach. We studied patient and ward characteristics relating to falls in an acute setting. In a prospective open observational study, we examined fall characteristics in two nuclear designed wards (A and B) and a longitudinal ward (C). We recorded 63 falls among 1609 patients. Ward C had the most falls (31 vs 18/14; p = 0.01), fall positive days (29 vs 15/10; p = 0.002) and fallers (27 vs 13/12; p = 0.001; OR 2.54, CI--1.41-4.57). Ward C had a higher cumulative risk of falls (p = 0.006) and fall positive days (p = 0.003). Choice of ward was a significant independent risk factor for falls (p = 0.01) when controlled for age, sex, and diagnostic variation between the wards. Most falls were intrinsic (A 66.7%, B 64.2%, C 61.3%, p = 0.45). A significantly higher proportion of falls on ward C occurred by the bed (p = 0.04). Significant differences exist between the wards, and fall reduction programmes should identify and compensate for adverse ward-related factors to increase the effectiveness of patient-targeted fall risk assessments.

Item Type:Article
ISSN:1368-5031
Subjects:Technology > Medicine and Health > Medicine and Surgery
Group:School of Health and Social Care > Centre for Postgraduate Medical Research and Education
ID Code:6190
Deposited By:INVALID USER
Deposited On:09 Sep 2008 16:48
Last Modified:07 Mar 2013 14:51
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