Abstract

Extensive research addresses the prevalence and high fall risk for cancer patients related to age, diagnosis, treatment side effects, pharmacological side effects, and cognitive and/or motor deficits. The purpose of the study was to explore the thoughts and feelings that inpatient and outpatient oncology direct care nurses (registered nurses) and support staffs have about reasons patients fall; as well as their thoughts on what might be done to prevent falls. This descriptive qualitative study used focus groups as the method for discovery. Six themes were identified: Effect on Me, Guilt, Noncompliance, Poor Choices, Inconsistency, and No Authority. This study is significant and relevant because there is little previous research addressing staff thoughts and feelings about why patients fall and what additional interventions they think can be implemented to prevent falls. Findings from this study may be helpful in developing and/or refining current fall policies. Existing research suggests unlicensed patient care providers often have minimal participation in postfall reviews. This study suggests they can provide insight into why patients fall. Additionally, both registered nurses and unlicensed providers describe barriers that often impede their ability to work as a team to prevent patient falls. Findings from this study identified the need for the patient care team to strengthen collaborative work to create safer patient environments.

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