心理干预
透视图(图形)
患者安全
危害
防坠落
医学
定性研究
医疗保健
护理部
心理学
自杀预防
医疗急救
毒物控制
社会心理学
社会学
人工智能
经济
经济增长
计算机科学
社会科学
作者
Bethany Radecki,Staci S. Reynolds,Areeba Kara
标识
DOI:10.1016/j.apnr.2018.08.001
摘要
The aim of this study was to describe the patient's perspective of fall prevention in an acute care setting to aid in the design of patient centered strategies.Falls are one of the most common adverse events in hospitals and can lead to preventable patient harm, increased length of stay, and increased healthcare costs. There is a need to understand fall risk and prevention from the patients' perspectives; however, research in this area is limited.To understand the patient perspective, semi-structured interviews were conducted with twelve patients at an academic healthcare center.Qualitative analysis revealed three major themes: (1) how I see myself, (2) how I see the interventions; and (3) how I see us. The theme "How I see myself" describes patients' beliefs of their own fall risk and includes the sub-themes of awareness, acceptance/rejection, implications, emotions, and personal plan. Interventions, such as fall alarms, are illustrated in the theme "How I see the interventions" and includes the subthemes what I see and hear and usefulness of equipment. Finally, "How I see us" describes barriers to participating in the fall prevention plan.Most fall prevention programs favor clinician-led plan development and implementation. Patient fall assessments needs to shift from being clinician-centric to patient-centric. Nurses must develop relationships with patients to facilitate understanding of their needs. Developing these truly patient-centered programs may reduce the over-reliance on bed alarms and allow for implementation of strategies aimed to mitigate modifiable risk factors leading to falls.
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