Interactions that support older inpatients with cognitive impairments to engage with falls prevention in hospitals: An ethnographic study

Author:

Mcvey Lynn12ORCID,Alvarado Natasha12,Zaman Hadar3,Healey Frances4,Todd Chris56,Issa Basma7,Woodcock David7,Dowding Dawn5,Hardiker Nicholas R.8,Lynch Alison6,Davison Eva7,Frost Tina7,Abdulkader Jamil7,Randell Rebecca12

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Digital Innovations in Health and Social Care, Faculty of Health Studies University of Bradford Bradford UK

2. Wolfson Centre for Applied Health Research Bradford UK

3. School of Pharmacy and Medical Sciences, Faculty of Life Sciences University of Bradford Bradford UK

4. Leeds and York Partnership NHS Foundation Trust Leeds UK

5. School of Health Sciences University of Manchester Manchester UK

6. Manchester University NHS Foundation Trust Manchester UK

7. University of Bradford Bradford UK

8. School of Human and Health Sciences University of Huddersfield Huddersfield UK

Abstract

AbstractAimsTo explore the nature of interactions that enable older inpatients with cognitive impairments to engage with hospital staff on falls prevention.DesignEthnographic study.MethodsEthnographic observations on orthopaedic and older person wards in English hospitals (251.25 h) and semi‐structured qualitative interviews with 50 staff, 28 patients and three carers. Findings were analysed using a framework approach.ResultsInteractions were often informal and personalised. Staff qualities that supported engagement in falls prevention included the ability to empathise and negotiate, taking patient perspectives into account. Although registered nurses had limited time for this, families/carers and other staff, including engagement workers, did so and passed information to nurses.ConclusionsSome older inpatients with cognitive impairments engaged with staff on falls prevention. Engagement enabled them to express their needs and collaborate, to an extent, on falls prevention activities. To support this, we recommend wider adoption in hospitals of engagement workers and developing the relational skills that underpin engagement in training programmes for patient‐facing staff.Implications for Profession and Patient CareInteractions that support cognitively impaired inpatients to engage in falls prevention can involve not only nurses, but also families/carers and non‐nursing staff, with potential to reduce pressures on busy nurses and improve patient safety.Reporting MethodThe paper adheres to EQUATOR guidelines, Standards for Reporting Qualitative Research.Patient or Public ContributionPatient/public contributors were involved in study design, evaluation and data analysis. They co‐authored this manuscript.

Funder

Health Services and Delivery Research Programme

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine,General Nursing

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