Abstract

We conducted a retrospective case-control study of falls over a four year period on a 30 bed neurorehabilitation unit at the Burke Rehabilitation Hospital to characterize the nature of falls and identify factors associated with falling. The most common diagnoses treated on the unit were traumatic spinal cord injury, brain injury, and multiple sclerosis; stroke patients are treated on another service. Falls represented 72 percent of all incident reports made to the Nursing Office during the study period. One hundred seventeen (117) falls occurred in 82 patients during a time when the unit census was 28,622 patient days, yielding a rate of 1,439 falls per 1,000 patient years. One hundred fourteen (114) patients admitted with no history of falling during the same period were selected randomly for comparison. Most falls were associated with no injury (n = 96) or minor injury (n = 18). The most significant injuries occurred in three cases with lacerations requiring sutures. Falls occurred with greatest frequency during the first and fourth quartiles of the hospital stay, during the evening and while bed transfers were being performed. No association between falling and patient age, sex, diagnosis, number of medications, use of sedating medications, presence of motor, visual or cognitive impairment or orthostatic hypotension was evident. An increased risk of falling was associated with physician orders for Posey restraints. The implication of these findings for falls prevention programs is discussed.

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