De-Implementing Fall Prevention Alarms in Hospitals
a study on Accidental Falls Safety Hospital Acquired Condition Clinical Alarms Mentoring
Summary
- Eligibility
- for people ages 18 years and up (full criteria)
- Location
- at UC Davis
- Dates
- study startedcompletion around
Description
Summary
This is a Hybrid II de-implementation study to reduce use of fall prevention alarms in hospitals. The intervention consists of tailored, site-specific approaches for three core implementation strategies: education, audit/feedback and opinion leaders. Hospital units will be randomized to low-intensity or high-intensity coaching for the implementation of the tailored strategies.
Details
Inpatient falls result in significant physical and economic burdens to patients (increased injury and mortality rates and decreased quality of life) as well as to medical organizations (increased lengths of stay, medical care costs, and litigation). The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) considers falls with injury a "never event"- an error in medical care that indicates a real problem in the safety and credibility of a health care institution. Hospitals are no longer reimbursed for extra costs incurred in the diagnosis and management of inpatient fall-related injuries. Thus, because patient falls are common, costly and interpreted as poor care quality, hospitals are highly incentivized to prevent them.
Alarm systems are designed to reduce falls by alerting staff when patients attempt to leave a bed or chair without assistance. There is now strong evidence that alarms are ineffective as a fall prevention maneuver in hospitals. Despite this, more than one-third of hospital patients are undergoing fall prevention alarm monitoring. In nursing homes, CMS regulates the use of fall prevention alarms as it does physical restraints. Instructions to nursing home surveyors state these devices should be used only when medically necessary and continuously reevaluated.
Guided by the Choosing Wisely De-implementation Framework, this project will generate a generalizable approach using coaching and tailored de-implementation strategies to reduce use of fall prevention alarms in hospitals. The investigators will conduct a hybrid II implementation study in 30 medical or medical-surgical units from US non-federal hospitals participating in the National Database of Nursing Quality Indicators. Findings from this study could also support future trials aimed at de-implementing low-quality alarm use in other care settings with known high fall rates (e.g., stroke care, cancer care). Evaluation of high versus low intensity coaching addresses an urgent need to evaluate use of tailored strategies and to establish effective thresholds for coaching within health service settings that have varying resources to support de-implementation efforts
Keywords
Accidental Fall, Patient Safety, Hospital Acquired Condition, Clinical Alarms, Mentoring, Iatrogenic Disease, High Intensity Coaching, Low Intensity Coaching
Eligibility
You can join if…
Open to people ages 18 years and up
- Stakeholders in fall prevention at up to 30 participating NDNQI hospitals
You CAN'T join if...
Locations
- University of California Davis Medical Center
accepting new patients
Sacramento California 95817 United States - PIH Health Downey Hospital
accepting new patients
Downey California 90241 United States
Details
- Status
- accepting new patients
- Start Date
- Completion Date
- (estimated)
- Sponsor
- University of Florida
- ID
- NCT06089239
- Study Type
- Interventional
- Participants
- Expecting 300 study participants
- Last Updated