Falls prevention among older adults at a Nursing home in a northern suburban of Perth in Western Australia

The objective was to identify factors leading to falls and determine the role of nurses and carers play in falls prevention. A retrospective audit of the performance of nurses and carers regarding falls prevention among older adults was used. Residents who had a fall during July 2015 (n=25) were id...

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Main Authors: Horatius Musembi Malilu, Deborah Sundin
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PAGEPress Publications 2019-11-01
Series:Geriatric Care
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.pagepressjournals.org/index.php/gc/article/view/8358
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spelling doaj-a62284d3626e4ecb966659478df82edc2020-11-25T03:19:27ZengPAGEPress PublicationsGeriatric Care2465-11092465-13972019-11-015310.4081/gc.2019.8358Falls prevention among older adults at a Nursing home in a northern suburban of Perth in Western AustraliaHoratius Musembi Malilu0Deborah Sundin1School of Nursing and Midwifery, Aga Khan University, NairobiSchool of Nursing and Midwifery, Edith Cowan University, Perth The objective was to identify factors leading to falls and determine the role of nurses and carers play in falls prevention. A retrospective audit of the performance of nurses and carers regarding falls prevention among older adults was used. Residents who had a fall during July 2015 (n=25) were identified using purposeful sampling. Data for this study were collected from the files of these residents. Data analysis was done by using the Fisher exact test which was appropriate for the collected data. Residents aged 85-89 years had the most falls (32%); however, one resident who fell five times in the studied month was aged 90 years. Residents aged 70-74 years had the lowest number of falls (8%). Twenty-two (88%) of the residents who fell were incontinent, 20 (80%) were confused, 19 (76%) were using walking aids and four (16%) were blind. Only five (20%) residents who reported falls in the studied month were independent. Most falls occurred among residents of advanced age, and among those who had incontinence, were confused and failed to use walking aids. Residential home staff should increase vigilance during specific times and monitors closely residents with a high risk of falls. https://www.pagepressjournals.org/index.php/gc/article/view/8358Older adultsagedresidential homesfallprevention.
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Horatius Musembi Malilu
Deborah Sundin
spellingShingle Horatius Musembi Malilu
Deborah Sundin
Falls prevention among older adults at a Nursing home in a northern suburban of Perth in Western Australia
Geriatric Care
Older adults
aged
residential homes
fall
prevention.
author_facet Horatius Musembi Malilu
Deborah Sundin
author_sort Horatius Musembi Malilu
title Falls prevention among older adults at a Nursing home in a northern suburban of Perth in Western Australia
title_short Falls prevention among older adults at a Nursing home in a northern suburban of Perth in Western Australia
title_full Falls prevention among older adults at a Nursing home in a northern suburban of Perth in Western Australia
title_fullStr Falls prevention among older adults at a Nursing home in a northern suburban of Perth in Western Australia
title_full_unstemmed Falls prevention among older adults at a Nursing home in a northern suburban of Perth in Western Australia
title_sort falls prevention among older adults at a nursing home in a northern suburban of perth in western australia
publisher PAGEPress Publications
series Geriatric Care
issn 2465-1109
2465-1397
publishDate 2019-11-01
description The objective was to identify factors leading to falls and determine the role of nurses and carers play in falls prevention. A retrospective audit of the performance of nurses and carers regarding falls prevention among older adults was used. Residents who had a fall during July 2015 (n=25) were identified using purposeful sampling. Data for this study were collected from the files of these residents. Data analysis was done by using the Fisher exact test which was appropriate for the collected data. Residents aged 85-89 years had the most falls (32%); however, one resident who fell five times in the studied month was aged 90 years. Residents aged 70-74 years had the lowest number of falls (8%). Twenty-two (88%) of the residents who fell were incontinent, 20 (80%) were confused, 19 (76%) were using walking aids and four (16%) were blind. Only five (20%) residents who reported falls in the studied month were independent. Most falls occurred among residents of advanced age, and among those who had incontinence, were confused and failed to use walking aids. Residential home staff should increase vigilance during specific times and monitors closely residents with a high risk of falls.
topic Older adults
aged
residential homes
fall
prevention.
url https://www.pagepressjournals.org/index.php/gc/article/view/8358
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