REFINE (REducing Falls in In-patieNt Elderly) using bed and bedside chair pressure sensors linked to radio-pagers in acute hospital care: a randomised controlled trial

Background: falls in hospitals are a major problem and contribute to substantial healthcare burden. Advances in sensor technology afford innovative approaches to reducing falls in acute hospital care. However, whether these are clinically effective and cost effective in the UK setting has not been evaluated. Methods: pragmatic, parallel-arm, individual randomised controlled trial of bed and bedside chair pressure sensors using radio-pagers (intervention group) compared with standard care (control group) in elderly patients admitted to acute, general medical wards, in a large UK teaching hospital. Primary outcome measure number of in-patient bedside falls per 1,000 bed days. Results: 1,839 participants were randomised (918 to the intervention group and 921 to the control group). There were 85 bedside falls (65 fallers) in the intervention group, falls rate 8.71 per 1,000 bed days compared with 83 bedside falls (64 fallers) in the control group, falls rate 9.84 per 1,000 bed days (adjusted incidence rate ratio, 0.90; 95% confidence interval [CI], 0.66–1.22; P = 0.51). There was no significant difference between the two groups with respect to time to first bedside fall (adjusted hazard ratio (HR), 0.95; 95% CI: 0.67–1.34; P= 0.12). The mean cost per patient in the intervention group was £7199 compared with £6400 in the control group, mean difference in QALYs per patient, 0.0001 (95% CI: −0.0006–0.0004, P= 0.67). Conclusions: bed and bedside chair pressure sensors as a single intervention strategy do not reduce in-patient bedside falls, time to first bedside fall and are not cost-effective in elderly patients in acute, general medical wards in the UK. Trial registration: isrctn.org identifier: ISRCTN44972300.

[1]  R Tideiksaar,et al.  Falls prevention: the efficacy of a bed alarm system in an acute-care setting. , 1993, The Mount Sinai journal of medicine, New York.

[2]  N. Taub,et al.  Delay between symptom onset and clinic attendance following TIA and minor stroke: the BEATS study. , 2014, Age and ageing.

[3]  R Platt,et al.  Serious falls in hospitalized patients: correlates and resource utilization. , 1995, The American journal of medicine.

[4]  M. Daniels,et al.  Effects of an Intervention to Increase Bed Alarm Use to Prevent Falls in Hospitalized Patients , 2012, Annals of Internal Medicine.

[5]  Rudy Hirschheim Office automation - a social and organizational perspective , 1986, John Wiley Information systems series.

[6]  L. Nyberg,et al.  A multidisciplinary, multifactorial intervention program reduces postoperative falls and injuries after femoral neck fracture , 2006, Osteoporosis International.

[7]  D. Ronis,et al.  The contribution of staff call light response time to fall and injurious fall rates: an exploratory study in four US hospitals using archived hospital data , 2012, BMC Health Services Research.

[8]  Catherine Griffiths,et al.  Office Automation: A Social and Organizational Perspective , 1986, J. Inf. Technol..

[9]  L. Mion,et al.  Improving the Capture of Fall Events in Hospitals: Combining a Service for Evaluating Inpatient Falls with an Incident Report System , 2008, Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

[10]  T. Hoffmann,et al.  Patient education to prevent falls among older hospital inpatients: a randomized controlled trial. , 2011, Archives of internal medicine.

[11]  D. Oliver,et al.  Preventing falls and fall-related injuries in hospitals. , 2010, Clinics in geriatric medicine.

[12]  Blackford Middleton,et al.  Fall prevention in acute care hospitals: a randomized trial. , 2010, JAMA.

[13]  Opinder Sahota,et al.  REFINE (Reducing Falls in In-patient Elderly) - a randomised controlled trial , 2009, Trials.

[14]  A. Kasuya EuroQol--a new facility for the measurement of health-related quality of life. , 1990, Health policy.

[15]  S. Gibson,et al.  Fear of falling revisited. , 1996, Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation.

[16]  K. Abromeit Music Received , 2023, Notes.

[17]  J. Y. Lee,et al.  Impact of a fall prevention programme in acute hospital settings in Singapore. , 2009, Singapore medical journal.

[18]  Chris Sauer,et al.  Lessons from a failed information systems initiative: issues for complex organisations , 1999, Int. J. Medical Informatics.

[19]  C. Harbottle Office Automation: A Social and Organizational Perspective , 1986 .

[20]  Ngaire Kerse,et al.  Interventions for preventing falls in older people in nursing care facilities and hospitals. , 2010, The Cochrane database of systematic reviews.

[21]  C. Gilleard,et al.  The emotional consequences of falls for older people and their families , 1995 .

[22]  M. Mcmurdo,et al.  Risk factors and risk assessment tools for falls in hospital in-patients: a systematic review. , 2004, Age and ageing.

[23]  Catherine Sherrington,et al.  Cluster randomised trial of a targeted multifactorial intervention to prevent falls among older people in hospital , 2008, BMJ : British Medical Journal.

[24]  N. Vetter,et al.  Anxiety and depression scores in elderly fallers , 1989 .

[25]  D. Wade,et al.  The Barthel ADL Index: a reliability study. , 1988, International disability studies.

[26]  J. Loeb,et al.  From the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations. , 1995, JAMA.

[27]  Vitamin D and in-patient falls. , 2008, Age and ageing.

[28]  P. Varghese,et al.  Pragmatic, Cluster Randomized Trial of a Policy to Introduce Low‐Low Beds to Hospital Wards for the Prevention of Falls and Fall Injuries , 2010, Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

[29]  A. Williams EuroQol : a new facility for the measurement of health-related quality of life , 1990 .

[30]  A. Campbell,et al.  Rethinking individual and community fall prevention strategies: a meta-regression comparing single and multifactorial interventions. , 2007, Age and ageing.

[31]  Kevin C Cain,et al.  Evaluation of a nonintrusive monitor to reduce falls in nursing home patients. , 2002, Journal of the American Medical Directors Association.