Objective: To determine whether locally adapting a falls risk factor assessment tool results in an instrument with clinimetric properties sufficient to support an acute hospital's falls prevention program. Design: Prospective cohort study of predictive validity and observational investigation of intra- and inter-rater reliability. Setting Acute wards in two large hospitals in Melbourne, Australia. Participants: One hundred and thirty acute hospital inpatients participated in the predictive accuracy evaluation, with 25 and 35 inpatients used for the intra-rater and inter-rater reliability analyses, respectively. Intervention(s): To develop a falls risk screen and assessment instrument through local adaptation of an existing tool. Clinimetric...
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the validity and reliability of the Peninsula Hea...
Aims and objectives: To investigate the impact of removing a falls risk screening tool from an overa...
hospitalised patients Sir—Several risk factors associated with falls in hospitalised patients have b...
Aim: This paper is a report of a study conducted to compare the predictive accuracy for fallers of T...
Background and Objective: To describe the diagnostic accuracy and practical application of the Peter...
© 2019 Background: Falls may result in significant patient harm. A recommended strategy to prevent f...
Falls occurring as a presenting feature of acute medical illness are significantly associated with a...
FRATs are designed to identify both persons at high risk of falls and to allow for cost-effective ta...
Background: Approximately 152,000 falls are reported in acute hospitals every year causing significa...
Background: Falls are the most common safety incident reported by acute hospitals. In England nation...
NoBackground: Falls are the most common safety incident reported by acute hospitals. NICE recommends...
Falls are major adverse events in hospitals. The appropriateness of using risk assessment instrument...
BACKGROUND: Falls screening tools are routinely used in hospital settings and the psychometric prope...
OBJECTIVES This study aimed to develop and validate a falls risk screening tool derived from interRA...
Importance: Falls represent a leading cause of preventable injury in hospitals and a frequently repo...
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the validity and reliability of the Peninsula Hea...
Aims and objectives: To investigate the impact of removing a falls risk screening tool from an overa...
hospitalised patients Sir—Several risk factors associated with falls in hospitalised patients have b...
Aim: This paper is a report of a study conducted to compare the predictive accuracy for fallers of T...
Background and Objective: To describe the diagnostic accuracy and practical application of the Peter...
© 2019 Background: Falls may result in significant patient harm. A recommended strategy to prevent f...
Falls occurring as a presenting feature of acute medical illness are significantly associated with a...
FRATs are designed to identify both persons at high risk of falls and to allow for cost-effective ta...
Background: Approximately 152,000 falls are reported in acute hospitals every year causing significa...
Background: Falls are the most common safety incident reported by acute hospitals. In England nation...
NoBackground: Falls are the most common safety incident reported by acute hospitals. NICE recommends...
Falls are major adverse events in hospitals. The appropriateness of using risk assessment instrument...
BACKGROUND: Falls screening tools are routinely used in hospital settings and the psychometric prope...
OBJECTIVES This study aimed to develop and validate a falls risk screening tool derived from interRA...
Importance: Falls represent a leading cause of preventable injury in hospitals and a frequently repo...
Purpose: The purpose of this study was to evaluate the validity and reliability of the Peninsula Hea...
Aims and objectives: To investigate the impact of removing a falls risk screening tool from an overa...
hospitalised patients Sir—Several risk factors associated with falls in hospitalised patients have b...