Cary Michael P, Hall Rasheeda K, Anderson Amber L, Burd Andrew, McConnell Eleanor S, Anderson Ruth A, Colón-Emeric Cathleen S
Author Affiliations: Duke University School of Nursing, Durham (Dr Cary, Ms Anderson, Mr Burd, and Dr McConnell); Geriatric Research, Education and Clinical Center (GRECC), Durham Veterans Affairs Medical Center (Drs Hall, McConnell, and Colón-Emeric); University of North Carolina School of Nursing, Chapel Hill (Dr Anderson); and Division of Geriatrics, Department of Medicine, Duke University School of Medicine, Durham (Dr Colón-Emeric), North Carolina.
Health Care Manag (Frederick). 2018 Jan/Mar;37(1):76-85. doi: 10.1097/HCM.0000000000000192.
We sought to understand strategies reported by members of the nursing home management team used to prevent falls in short-stay nursing home patients. Using Donabedian's model of structure, process, and outcomes, we interviewed 16 managers from 4 nursing homes in central North Carolina. Nursing home managers identified specific barriers to fall prevention among short-stay patients including rapid changes in functional and cognitive status, staff unfamiliarity with short-stay patient needs and patterns, and policies impacting care. Few interventions for reducing falls among short-stay patients were used at the structure level (eg, specialized units, workload ratio, and staffing consistency); however, many process-level interventions were used (eg, patient education on problem solving, self-care/mobility, and safety). We described several barriers to fall prevention among short-stay patients in nursing homes. From these descriptions, we propose three interventions that might reduce falls for short-stay patients and could be tested in future research: (1) clustering short-stay patients within a physical location to permit higher staff-patient ratios and enhanced surveillance, (2) population-based prevention interventions to supplement existing individually tailored prevention strategies (eg, toileting schedules, medication review for all), and (3) transitional care interventions that transmit key information from hospitals to nursing homes.
我们试图了解疗养院管理团队成员报告的用于预防短期入住疗养院患者跌倒的策略。利用唐纳贝迪安的结构、过程和结果模型,我们采访了北卡罗来纳州中部4家疗养院的16名管理人员。疗养院管理人员确定了短期入住患者预防跌倒的具体障碍,包括功能和认知状态的快速变化、工作人员对短期入住患者需求和模式的不熟悉以及影响护理的政策。在结构层面(如专门病房、工作量比例和人员配备一致性),很少采用减少短期入住患者跌倒的干预措施;然而,许多过程层面的干预措施被采用(如对患者进行解决问题、自我护理/移动和安全方面的教育)。我们描述了疗养院短期入住患者预防跌倒的几个障碍。基于这些描述,我们提出了三种可能减少短期入住患者跌倒的干预措施,可在未来研究中进行测试:(1)将短期入住患者集中安置在一个物理区域,以实现更高的医护比并加强监测;(2)基于人群的预防干预措施,以补充现有的针对个体的预防策略(如如厕时间表、对所有人进行药物审查);(3)过渡性护理干预措施,将关键信息从医院传递到疗养院。