Nursing Home PRevention of Injury in DEmentia (NH PRIDE): A pilot study of a remote injury prevention service for NH residents

Author:

Berry Sarah D.12,Hecker Emily J.3,McConnell Eleanor S.45,Xue Tingzhong‐Michelle45,Tsai Timothy1ORCID,Zullo Andrew R.67ORCID,Colón‐Emeric Cathleen34ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Hinda and Arthur Marcus Institute for Aging Research and Department of Medicine Hebrew SeniorLife Boston Massachusetts USA

2. Department of Medicine & Harvard Medical School Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center Boston Massachusetts USA

3. Department of Medicine, Division of Geriatric Medicine Duke University School of Medicine Durham North Carolina USA

4. Durham VA Geriatric Research Education and Clinical Center Durham North Carolina USA

5. Duke University School of Nursing Durham North Carolina USA

6. Brown University School of Public Health Providence Rhode Island USA

7. Center of Innovation in Long‐Term Services and Supports Providence Veterans Affairs Medical Center Providence Rhode Island USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundMedication optimization, including prescription of osteoporosis medications and deprescribing medications associated with falls, may reduce injurious falls. Our objective was to describe a remote, injury prevention service (NH PRIDE) designed to optimize medication use in nursing homes (NHs), and to describe its implementation outcomes in a pilot study.MethodsThis was a non‐randomized trial (pilot study) including NH staff and residents from five facilities. Long‐stay residents at high‐risk for injurious falls were identified using a validated risk calculator and staff referral. A remote team reviewed the electronic health record (EHR) and provided recommendations as Injury Prevention Plans (IPP). A research nurse served as a care coordinator focused on resident engagement and shared decision‐making. Outcomes included implementation measures, as identified in the EHR, and surveys and interviews with staff.ResultsAcross five facilities, 274 residents were screened for eligibility, and 46 residents (16.8%) were enrolled. Most residents were female (73.9%) and had dementia (63.0%). An IPP was completed for 45 residents (97.8%). The nurse made a total of 93 deprescribing recommendations in 36 residents (80% of residents had one or more deprescribing recommendation; mean 2.2 recommendations/resident). Twenty of 45 residents (44.4%) had a recommendation for osteoporosis treatment. Among residents with recommendations, 21/36 (58.3%) had one or more deprescribing orders written and 6/20 (30.0%) had an osteoporosis medication prescribed. At 4 months, most medication changes persisted. Adverse side effects were rare. Staff members identified several areas for program refinement, including aligning recommendations with provider workflow and engaging consultant psychiatrists.ConclusionsA remote injury prevention service is safe and feasible to enhance deprescribing and osteoporosis treatment in long‐stay NH residents at risk for injury. Additional investigation is needed to determine if this model could reduce injurious falls when deployed across NH chains.

Funder

National Institute on Aging

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology

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