BackgroundFalls in hospitals continue to burden patients, staff, and health systems. Prevention approaches are varied, as well as their success at preventing falls. Intervention component analysis (ICA) is useful in indicating important features associated with successful interventions in sets of trial with high heterogeneity.MethodsWe conducted an ICA of systematically identified randomised controlled trials of interventions for preventing falls in older people in hospitals. Trial characteristics were extracted; inductive thematic analysis of published papers from included trials to seek triallists perspectives on drivers of success or failure of trials was conducted (ICA stage one) followed by a stratified thematic synthesis by trial outcomes, where trials were classified as positive or negative based on their falls rate or falls risk ratios (ICA stage two) and mapped to the presence of the theorised drivers of success or failure of the trials.Results45 trials met the inclusion criteria. Inductive thematic analysis of 50 papers revealed three key drivers (themes), each with subthemes, of effective inpatient hospital fall prevention trials. Theme 1, integration with the local setting, was present in 79% of the positive trials and 67% of the negative trials (79% vs 62% engaging ward staff and 33% vs 43% engaging hospital management). Theme 2, responsive interventions, was present in 83% of the positive trials and 71% of the negative trials (29% vs 38% targeting patient risk assessments and 83% vs 57% tailoring to patient needs and abilities). Theme 3, patient and family involvement, featured in 83% of the positive trials and 52% of the negative trials (50% vs 19% through fall prevention awareness and 58% vs 48% through an active role in fall prevention).ConclusionTailored fall prevention approaches and involving patient and family in fall prevention through increasing awareness, in addition to integration with the local intervention setting, appear to play a role in impacting the effectiveness of fall prevention interventions. These theories should be considered in the design of future fall prevention programs and trials and require further evaluation in high quality trials.
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