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Journal Article

Citation

Haines TP, Hill AM, Hill KD, McPhail S, Oliver D, Brauer SG, Hoffmann T, Beer C. Arch. Intern. Med. 2011; 171(6): 516-524.

Affiliation

Physiotherapy Department, Monash University and Southern Health, Cheltenham, Victoria, Australia (Dr Haines); Physiotherapy Department (Ms Hill and Dr Brauer) and Division of Occupational Therapy (Dr Hoffmann), University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia; LaTrobe University, Northern Health and the National Ageing Research Institute, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia (Dr Hill); Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation and School of Public Health, Queensland University of Technology, and Centre for Functioning and Health Research, Queensland Health, Brisbane (Mr McPhail); School of Community and Health Sciences, City University, London, England (Dr Oliver); and Western Australia Centre for Health and Ageing, Centre for Medical Research, and School of Medicine and Pharmacology, University of Western Australia, Perth, Western Australia, Australia (Dr Beer).

Copyright

(Copyright © 2011, American Medical Association)

DOI

10.1001/archinternmed.2010.444

PMID

21098343

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Falls are a common adverse event during hospitalization of older adults, and few interventions have been shown to prevent then. METHODS: This study was a 3-group randomized trial to evaluate the efficacy of 2 forms of multimedia patient education compared with usual care for the prevention of in-hospital falls. Older hospital patients (n = 1206) admitted to a mixture of acute (orthopedic, respiratory, and medical) and subacute (geriatric and neurorehabilitation) hospital wards at 2 Australian hospitals were recruited between January 2008 and April 2009. The interventions were a multimedia patient education program based on the health-belief model combined with trained health professional follow-up (complete program), multi-media patient education materials alone (materials only), and usual care (control). Falls data were collected by blinded research assistants by reviewing hospital incident reports, hand searching medical records, and conducting weekly patient interviews. RESULTS: Rates of falls per 1000 patient-days did not differ significantly between groups (control, 9.27; materials only, 8.61; and complete program, 7.63). However, there was a significant interaction between the intervention and presence of cognitive impairment. Falls were less frequent among cognitively intact patients in the complete program group (4.01 per 1000 patient-days) than among cognitively intact patients in the materials-only group (8.18 per 1000 patient-days) (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.51; 95% confidence interval, 0.28-0.93]) and control group (8.72 per 1000 patient-days) (adjusted hazard ratio, 0.43; 95% confidence interval, 0.24-0.78). CONCLUSION: Multimedia patient education with trained health professional follow-up reduced falls among patients with intact cognitive function admitted to a range of hospital wards. Trial Registration  anzctr.org.au Identifier: ACTRN12608000015347.


Language: en

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