REFINE (Reducing Falls in In-patient Elderly)--a randomised controlled trial
REFINE (Reducing Falls in In-patient Elderly)--a randomised controlled trial
BACKGROUND: Falls in hospitals are common, resulting in injury and anxiety to patients, and large costs to NHS organisations. More than half of all in-patient falls in elderly people in acute care settings occur at the bedside, during transfers or whilst getting up to go to the toilet. In the majority of cases these falls are unwitnessed. There is insufficient evidence underpinning the effectiveness of interventions to guide clinical staff regarding the reduction of falls in the elderly inpatient. New patient monitoring technologies have the potential to offer advances in falls prevention. Bedside sensor equipment can alert staff, not in the immediate vicinity, to a potential problem and avert a fall. However no studies utilizing this assistive technology have demonstrated a significant reduction in falls rates in a randomised controlled trial setting.
METHODS/DESIGN: The research design is an individual patient randomised controlled trial of bedside chair and bed pressure sensors, incorporating a radio-paging alerting mode to alert staff to patients rising from their bed or chair, across five acute elderly care wards in Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust. Participants will be randomised to bedside chair and bed sensors or to usual care (without the use of sensors). The primary outcome is the number of bedside in-patient falls.
DISCUSSION: The REFINE study is the first randomised controlled trial of bedside pressure sensors in elderly inpatients in an acute NHS Trust. We will assess whether falls can be successfully and cost effectively reduced using this technology, and report on its acceptability to both patients and staff.
Accidental Falls/prevention & control, Aged, Humans, Inpatients
Vass, Catherine D
4f6f59e4-0f23-4ad2-9a60-bbf9ba297afc
Sahota, Opinder
1816e216-bea1-412c-948d-1c1ab8fdbc28
Drummond, Avril
559a0644-290a-4fcf-9781-0174f2553a8d
Kendrick, Denise
33ad9db9-6d98-4e87-a2ad-323b289e3a16
Gladman, John
89788999-01d4-4bd1-adb0-d96b68f2f270
Sach, Tracey
5c09256f-ebed-4d14-853a-181f6c92d6f2
Avis, Mark
ae63b058-2a7b-44fd-9760-ea84797fe197
Grainge, Matthew
5c8b992f-000d-4556-983f-7a91f283d5d6
10 September 2009
Vass, Catherine D
4f6f59e4-0f23-4ad2-9a60-bbf9ba297afc
Sahota, Opinder
1816e216-bea1-412c-948d-1c1ab8fdbc28
Drummond, Avril
559a0644-290a-4fcf-9781-0174f2553a8d
Kendrick, Denise
33ad9db9-6d98-4e87-a2ad-323b289e3a16
Gladman, John
89788999-01d4-4bd1-adb0-d96b68f2f270
Sach, Tracey
5c09256f-ebed-4d14-853a-181f6c92d6f2
Avis, Mark
ae63b058-2a7b-44fd-9760-ea84797fe197
Grainge, Matthew
5c8b992f-000d-4556-983f-7a91f283d5d6
Vass, Catherine D, Sahota, Opinder, Drummond, Avril, Kendrick, Denise, Gladman, John, Sach, Tracey, Avis, Mark and Grainge, Matthew
(2009)
REFINE (Reducing Falls in In-patient Elderly)--a randomised controlled trial.
Trials, 10, [83].
(doi:10.1186/1745-6215-10-83).
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Falls in hospitals are common, resulting in injury and anxiety to patients, and large costs to NHS organisations. More than half of all in-patient falls in elderly people in acute care settings occur at the bedside, during transfers or whilst getting up to go to the toilet. In the majority of cases these falls are unwitnessed. There is insufficient evidence underpinning the effectiveness of interventions to guide clinical staff regarding the reduction of falls in the elderly inpatient. New patient monitoring technologies have the potential to offer advances in falls prevention. Bedside sensor equipment can alert staff, not in the immediate vicinity, to a potential problem and avert a fall. However no studies utilizing this assistive technology have demonstrated a significant reduction in falls rates in a randomised controlled trial setting.
METHODS/DESIGN: The research design is an individual patient randomised controlled trial of bedside chair and bed pressure sensors, incorporating a radio-paging alerting mode to alert staff to patients rising from their bed or chair, across five acute elderly care wards in Nottingham University Hospitals NHS Trust. Participants will be randomised to bedside chair and bed sensors or to usual care (without the use of sensors). The primary outcome is the number of bedside in-patient falls.
DISCUSSION: The REFINE study is the first randomised controlled trial of bedside pressure sensors in elderly inpatients in an acute NHS Trust. We will assess whether falls can be successfully and cost effectively reduced using this technology, and report on its acceptability to both patients and staff.
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More information
Published date: 10 September 2009
Keywords:
Accidental Falls/prevention & control, Aged, Humans, Inpatients
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 479756
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/479756
ISSN: 1745-6215
PURE UUID: 2e293636-b569-4f32-94a2-1ce20333104e
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Date deposited: 26 Jul 2023 16:56
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:20
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Contributors
Author:
Catherine D Vass
Author:
Opinder Sahota
Author:
Avril Drummond
Author:
Denise Kendrick
Author:
John Gladman
Author:
Tracey Sach
Author:
Mark Avis
Author:
Matthew Grainge
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