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Journal Article

Citation

Harvey K, Kramlich D, Chapman J, Parker J, Blades E. J. Nurs. Manag. 2010; 18(5): 531-541.

Affiliation

Data Analyst III, Center for Nursing Research and Quality Outcomes, Maine Medical Center, Portland, ME, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2010, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/j.1365-2834.2010.01095.x

PMID

20636501

Abstract

Aim To evaluate currently available pediatric falls assessments instruments and to build a predictive fall model while also evaluating injury risk as a predictor of fall likelihood within the paediatric inpatient population. Background There is lack of paediatric-specific fall assessment instruments and little information on the exploration of injury risk as related to falls in hospitalized children. Method An ambispective, matched case-control design conducted in a sample of 100 inpatient paediatric patients. Results Two out of five instruments performed well to classify children at risk of falls. Longer length of stay, bleeding cautions/blood disorders and temperament/behaviour issues were significant predictors of fall likelihood. Cognitive impairment or neurological disease was not related to an increased likelihood of fall or injury risk for this sample. Conclusions More research is required to institute and standardize pediatric fall and injury risk assessments for everyday use. The explicit approach of using predictive modelling is critical in creating a universal, baseline reference for the most reliable and valid measure of assessment in children. Implications for nursing management Findings of the present study increase awareness of nursing managers and leaders as to the necessity for fall and injury risk assessment as a safety and quality measure for inpatient pediatric populations.


Language: en

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