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    'My independent streak may get in the way': How older adults respond to falls prevention education in hospital

    241973_241973.pdf (1.361Mb)
    Access Status
    Open access
    Authors
    Hill, Anne-Marie
    Francis-Coad, J.
    Haines, T.
    Waldron, N.
    Etherton-Beer, C.
    Flicker, L.
    Ingram, K.
    McPhail, S.
    Date
    2016
    Type
    Journal Article
    
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Citation
    Hill, A. and Francis-Coad, J. and Haines, T. and Waldron, N. and Etherton-Beer, C. and Flicker, L. and Ingram, K. et al. 2016. 'My independent streak may get in the way': How older adults respond to falls prevention education in hospital. BMJ Open. 6 (7): pp. 1-11.
    Source Title
    BMJ Open
    DOI
    10.1136/bmjopen-2016-012363
    School
    School of Physiotherapy and Exercise Science
    Remarks

    This open access article is distributed under the Creative Commons license https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/

    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/27711
    Collection
    • Curtin Research Publications
    Abstract

    Objectives: The aim of the study was to determine how providing individualised falls prevention education facilitated behaviour change from the perspective of older hospital patients on rehabilitation wards and what barriers they identified to engaging in preventive strategies. Design: A prospective qualitative survey. Methods: Older patients (n=757) who were eligible (mini-mental state examination score>23/30) received falls prevention education while admitted to eight rehabilitation hospital wards in Western Australia. Subsequently, 610 participants were surveyed using a semistructured questionnaire to gain their response to the in-hospital education and their identified barriers to engaging in falls prevention strategies. Deductive content analysis was used to map responses against conceptual frameworks of health behaviour change and risk taking. Results: Participants who responded (n=473) stated that the education raised their awareness, knowledge and confidence to actively engage in falls prevention strategies, such as asking for assistance prior to mobilising. Participants' thoughts and feelings about their recovery were the main barriers they identified to engaging in safe strategies, including feeling overconfident or desiring to be independent and thinking that staff would be delayed in providing assistance. The most common task identified as potentially leading to risk-taking behaviour was needing to use the toilet. Conclusions: Individualised education assists older hospital rehabilitation patients with good levels of cognition to engage in suitable falls prevention strategies while on the ward. Staff should engage with patients to understand their perceptions about their recovery and support patients to take an active role in planning their rehabilitation.

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    • It promoted a positive culture around falls prevention': Staff response to a patient education programme-a qualitative evaluation
      Hill, Anne-Marie; Waldron, N.; Francis-Coad, J.; Haines, T.; Etherton-Beer, C.; Flicker, L.; Ingram, K.; McPhail, S. (2016)
      Objectives: The purpose of this study was to understand how staff responded to individualised patient falls prevention education delivered as part of a cluster randomised trial, including how they perceived the education ...
    • Impact of tailored falls prevention education for older adults at hospital discharge on engagement in falls prevention strategies postdischarge: protocol for a process evaluation
      Naseri, C.; McPhail, S.; Netto, J.; Haines, T.; Morris, M.; Etherton-Beer, C.; Flicker, L.; Lee, D.; Francis-Coad, J.; Hill, Anne-Marie (2018)
      Introduction: Older adults recently discharged from hospital have greater incidence of adverse events, functional decline, falls and subsequent readmission. Providing education to hospitalised patients on how to prevent ...
    • Evaluation of the effect of patient education on rates of falls in older hospital patients: Description of a randomised controlled trial
      Hill, Anne-Marie; Hill, Keith; Brauer, S.; Oliver, D.; Hoffmann, T.; Beer, C.; McPhail, S.; Haines, T. (2009)
      Background. Accidental falls by older patients in hospital are one of the most commonly reported adverse events. Falls after discharge are also common. These falls have enormous physical, psychological and social consequences ...
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