Hill Anne-Marie, Waldron Nicholas, Etherton-Beer Christopher, McPhail Steven M, Ingram Katharine, Flicker Leon, Haines Terry P
School of Physiotherapy, The University of Notre Dame Australia, Fremantle, Western Australia, Australia.
BMJ Open. 2014 Jan 14;4(1):e004195. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2013-004195.
Falls are the most frequent adverse event reported in hospitals. Approximately 30% of in-hospital falls lead to an injury and up to 2% result in a fracture. A large randomised trial found that a trained health professional providing individualised falls prevention education to older inpatients reduced falls in a cognitively intact subgroup. This study aims to investigate whether this efficacious intervention can reduce falls and be clinically useful and cost-effective when delivered in the real-life clinical environment.
A stepped-wedge cluster randomised trial will be used across eight subacute units (clusters) which will be randomised to one of four dates to start the intervention. Usual care on these units includes patient's screening, assessment and implementation of individualised falls prevention strategies, ongoing staff training and environmental strategies. Patients with better levels of cognition (Mini-Mental State Examination >23/30) will receive the individualised education from a trained health professional in addition to usual care while patient's feedback received during education sessions will be provided to unit staff. Unit staff will receive training to assist in intervention delivery and to enhance uptake of strategies by patients. Falls data will be collected by two methods: case note audit by research assistants and the hospital falls reporting system. Cluster-level data including patient's admissions, length of stay and diagnosis will be collected from hospital systems. Data will be analysed allowing for correlation of outcomes (clustering) within units. An economic analysis will be undertaken which includes an incremental cost-effectiveness analysis.
The study was approved by The University of Notre Dame Australia Human Research Ethics Committee and local hospital ethics committees.
The results will be disseminated through local site networks, and future funding and delivery of falls prevention programmes within WA Health will be informed. Results will also be disseminated through peer-reviewed publications and medical conferences.
The study is registered with the Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials registry (ACTRN12612000877886).
跌倒为医院报告的最常见不良事件。约30%的院内跌倒会导致受伤,高达2%会导致骨折。一项大型随机试验发现,为老年住院患者提供个性化跌倒预防教育的经过培训的健康专业人员可减少认知功能正常亚组中的跌倒。本研究旨在调查这种有效干预措施在现实临床环境中实施时是否可减少跌倒,并具有临床实用性和成本效益。
将在八个亚急性病房(群组)中采用阶梯式楔形整群随机试验,这些病房将被随机分配到四个开始干预的日期之一。这些病房的常规护理包括患者筛查、评估和实施个性化跌倒预防策略、持续的工作人员培训和环境策略。认知水平较高(简易精神状态检查表>23/30)的患者除常规护理外,还将接受经过培训的健康专业人员的个性化教育,同时教育过程中收到的患者反馈将提供给病房工作人员。病房工作人员将接受培训,以协助实施干预措施并提高患者对策略的接受度。跌倒数据将通过两种方法收集:研究助理进行病例记录审核和医院跌倒报告系统。包括患者入院、住院时间和诊断在内的群组层面数据将从医院系统中收集。将进行数据分析,以考虑各病房内结果的相关性(聚类)。将进行经济分析,包括增量成本效益分析。
本研究已获得澳大利亚圣母大学人类研究伦理委员会和当地医院伦理委员会的批准。
研究结果将通过当地站点网络进行传播,并为西澳大利亚州卫生部门未来预防跌倒计划的资金投入和实施提供参考。研究结果还将通过同行评审出版物和医学会议进行传播。
本研究已在澳大利亚新西兰临床试验注册中心注册(ACTRN12612000877886)。