OBJECTIVES: To systematically document the implementation, components, comparators, adherence, and effectiveness of published fall prevention approaches in U.S. acute care hospitals.
DESIGN: Systematic review. Studies were identified through existing reviews, searching five electronic databases, screening reference lists, and contacting topic experts for studies published through August 2011.
SETTING: U.S. acute care hospitals.
PARTICIPANTS: Studies reporting in-hospital falls for intervention groups and concurrent (e.g., controlled trials) or historic comparators (e.g., before-after studies).
INTERVENTION: Fall prevention interventions.
MEASUREMENTS: Incidence rate ratios (IRR, ratio of fall rate postintervention or treatment group to the fall rate preintervention or control group) and ratings of study details.
RESULTS: Fifty-nine studies met inclusion criteria. Implementation strategies were sparsely documented (17% not at all) and included staff education, establishing committees, seeking leadership support, and occasionally continuous quality improvement techniques. Most interventions (81%) included multiple components (e.g., risk assessments (often not validated), visual risk alerts, patient education, care rounds, bed-exit alarms, and postfall evaluations). Fifty-four percent did not report on fall prevention measures applied in the comparison group, and 39% neither reported fidelity data nor described adherence strategies such as regular audits and feedback to ensure completion of care processes. Only 45% of concurrent and 15% of historic control studies reported sufficient data to compare fall rates. The pooled postintervention incidence rate ratio (IRR) was 0.77 (95% confidence interval = 0.52-1.12, P = .17; eight studies; I(2) : 94%). Meta-regressions showed no systematic association between implementation intensity, intervention complexity, comparator information, or adherence levels and IRR.
CONCLUSION: Promising approaches exist, but better reporting of outcomes, implementation, adherence, intervention components, and comparison group information is necessary to establish evidence on how hospitals can successfully prevent falls.
Interesting review of studies evaluating falls prevention strategies for hospital inpatients. The review is probably most useful to falls researchers rather than clinicians, since it focuses on the need for better reporting of outcomes, implementation, adherence, intervention components, and comparison group information.
Excellent systematic review of in-hospital falls prevention programs, demonstrating borderline clinical (23%) but statistical non-significant (P=.17)effect upon post-intervention falls incidence, and no association between falls prevention and intervention complexity, intensity, or adherence. This is a murky but state of the art answer with an important implication; specifically, that the cookie-cutter application of falls prevention strategies by hospital administrators without a major evaluation component built in, is probably a bad use of health care dollars.
Useful to know that there is not much good data available even though this is a very important issue.