8.10 Fall Prevention

Client falls are the most reported client safety events in British Columbia and account for 40% of all adverse events (BCPSLS Central, 2015). Falls are a major priority in healthcare, and healthcare providers are responsible for identifying, managing, and eliminating potential hazards to clients. Older adults may be at increased risk for falls due to impaired mental status, decreased strength, impaired balance and mobility, and decreased sensory perception (Titler et al., 2011). Other clients may be at risk due to gait problems, cognitive ability, visual problems, urinary frequency, generalized weakness, and cognitive dysfunction. Specific treatments and medications may cause hypotension or drowsiness, which increases a client’s risk for falls (Hook & Winchel, 2006).

If the client begins to fall during a transfer, never try to keep them from falling as this may cause both you and the client injury. Instead, you will assist the client to fall. First, widen your stance and bring the client’s body close to you to provide support. Bend your knees and using the strength of your thighs, lower the client to the ground. Health Care Assistants should report the near fall or any actual falls immediately to their supervisor. Do not attempt to get the client up alone. The agency may require the client gets evaluated by a nurse before helping the client back up. Report any injuries or concerns. Health Care Assistants will also likely be required to complete documentation following the agency policies.

Fall Prevention Strategies

All clients should be assessed for risk factors, and necessary prevention measures should be implemented as per agency policy. Table 8.7 lists factors that affect client safety and general measures to prevent falls in healthcare.

Table 8.10.1 Fall Prevention Strategies

Prior to ambulation consider the following risk factors:

  • Age (elderly)
  • Sensory-perception alteration
  • Cognitive impairment (decreased LOC, confusion)
  • Poly-pharmacology
  • Urinary incontinence
  • Ability to communicate (language barriers)
  • Lack of safety awareness (height of bed, attachments and tubes)
  • Environmental factors (dim light, tripping hazards, uneven floors)
Prevention Strategies Safety Measures
Look for fall risk factors in all clients. Identifying specific factors helps you implement specific preventive measures. Risk factors include age, weakness on one side, the use of a cane or walker, history of dizziness or lightheadedness, low blood pressure, and weakness.
Follow hospital guidelines for transfers. Transfer guidelines provide a good baseline for further client risk assessments.
Orient client to surroundings. Orient clients to bed, surroundings, location of bathroom and call bell, and tripping hazards in the surrounding environment.
Answer call bells promptly. Long wait times may encourage unstable clients to ambulate independently.
Ensure basic elimination and personal needs are met. Provide opportunities for clients to use the bathroom and to ask for water, pain medication, or a blanket.
Ensure client has proper footwear and mobility aids. Proper footwear prevents slips.

Figure 8.10.1 Proper Footwear
Communicate with your clients. Let clients know when you will be back, and how you will help them ambulate.
Keep bed in the lowest position for sedated, unconscious, or compromised clients. This step prevents injury to clients should they attempt to get out of bed.
Avoid using side rails when a client is confused. Side rails may create a barrier that can be easily climbed and create a fall risk situation for confused clients.
Keep assistive devices and other commonly used items close by. Allow clients to access assistive devices quickly and safely. Items such as the call bell, water, and Kleenex should be kept close by, to avoid any excessive reaching.
Data sources: Canadian Client Safety Institute, 2015; Perry et al., 2018; Titler et al., 2011

Lowering a Client to the Floor

A client may fall while ambulating or being transferred from one surface to another. If a client begins to fall from a standing position, do not attempt to stop the fall or catch the client. Instead, control the fall by lowering the client to the floor. Checklist 34 lists the steps to assisting a client to the floor to minimize injury to client and healthcare provider (PHSA, 2010).

Checklist 8.10.1 Lowering a Client to the Floor

Disclaimer: Always review and follow your agency policy regarding this specific skill.

Safety considerations: 

  • There is always a potential fall risk during transfers and ambulation. Prevention is key.
  • If a client begins to feel dizzy, have them sit on a chair or the floor to avoid a fall.
  • The head is the most important part of the body; always protect it as much as possible.
  • In the event of a fall, stay with the client until help arrives.
  • After a fall, always assess a client for injuries prior to moving them. If the client remains weak or dizzy, do not attempt to ambulate them. Seek help.
  • Document according to agency policy including the PSLS (client safety learning system).
Steps  Additional Information
1. If a client starts to fall and you are close by, move behind the client and take one step back. Look and be attentive to cues if a client is feeling dizzy or weak.

Figure 8.10.2 Stand behind client
2. Support the client around the waist or hip area or grab the gait belt. Bend your leg and place it in between the client’s legs. Hand placement allows for a solid grip on the client to guide the fall.

Figure 8.10.3 Support client by grabbing the hip area or gait belt
3. Slowly slide the client down your leg, lowering yourself at the same time. First, always protect the head. Lowering yourself with the client prevents back injury and allows you to protect the client’s head from hitting the floor or hard objects.

Figure 8.10.4 Lower client to the floor
4. Once the client is on the floor, assess the client for injuries prior to moving. Assesses client’s ability, or need for additional help, to get off the floor.

Figure 8.10.5 Assess client prior to moving
5. Provide reassurance and seek assistance if required. If required, stay with the client and call out for help.
6. If client is unable to get up off the floor, use a mechanical lift. If client still feels dizzy or weak, using a mechanical lift will prevent injury.
7. Complete an incident report according to agency policy. An incident report helps identify and manage risks related to client falls.
Data sources: Perry et al., 2018; PHSA, 2010; Titler et al., 2011

Special considerations:

  • Use a falls risk assessment tool for all clients according to agency policy.
  • Younger clients may not be aware of the effects of medication and treatments leading to dizziness and orthostatic hypotension.
  • Inform clients and family members about the potential risks for falls in the hospital. If informed, people are more likely to call for assistance.
  • Always ensure call bell is in place. Many falls occur due to incontinence issues. The call bell allows client and family to obtain assistance quickly.
  • If appropriate, educate client about home maintenance and safety to prevent falls when returning home.
  • Fall prevention is interdisciplinary. Proper communication by the care team is required to prevent falls.

Watch the video Assisted Fall (2018) by Kim Morris of Thompson Rivers University School of Nursing.

LearningHub is a Province-wide course registry and learning management system for the health authorities in British Columbia. Sign up to learn more about safely lowering a client to the floor: https://learninghub.phsa.ca/Courses/19406/lowering-a-patient-to-the-floor

Critical Thinking Exercises
  1. Name four fall prevention strategies that will help keep a client safe when ambulating in the hospital.
  2. A client is ambulating for the first time after surgery. Is it safe to encourage the client to ambulate independently?
  3. Many physiological risk factors can be identified from a routine assessment to suggest risk for falls. Name three risk factors and three prevention strategies to manage these risks. For example, if a client has frequent toileting needs, a preventive action is to offer assistance to the toilet every hour, and to ensure the call bell is within reach at all times.
Summary

The determination of when to use a mechanical lift in the home setting is complex. It requires a careful assessment of the client’s motor, communication, and cognitive abilities; physical characteristics; and the physical environment of the home.

Mechanical lifts and transfer can efficiently help move clients from one place to another, whether it is from a bed to a bath or from a wheelchair to a toilet They are designed to aid healthcare staff, particularly HCAs when working with clients who have mobility challenges. Knowing how to properly lift or transfer clients can minimize the amount of manual effort required to do so and reduces exposure to the known injury risk factors of excessive force and awkward posture, contributing musculoskeletal injuries. And, when used properly, they present an effective and efficient solution for moving clients.

To use the principles of body mechanics effectively and safely, healthcare providers must have the required training to perform a risk assessment, knowledge about transfer assistive devices, and an understanding of the procedures for safe client handling. In addition, knowing risk factors for positioning, transferring, and ambulation, along with understanding falls prevention, will help prevent injuries to staff and clients. The goal of this chapter has been to help reduce the incidence and severity of injuries related to client-handling procedures.

Suggested Online Resources

  1. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality: Which Fall Prevention Practices Do You Want to Use? (2013). These universal fall risk precautions review physiological, anticipated, unanticipated, and environmental hazards with a focus on identifying risk factors and prevention strategies.
  2. BC Interior Health: Safe Client Handling (n.d.). This website lists excellent resources, including brochures and videos, about topics related to body mechanics, transfers, positions, and performing risk assessments.
  3. BC Client Safety & Quality Council: Hospital Care for Seniors: 48/6 Approach (2012). This resource offers a model of care for hospitalized seniors (aged 70 and older) in British Columbia. It is an integrated care initiative that addresses six care areas of functioning through client screening and assessment (assessments are completed only where screening shows areas of concern) within the first 48 hours of hospital admission.
  4. Canadian Fall Prevention Education Collaborative: Canadian Fall Prevention Curriculum (2017). This website provides information and tool kits for preventing falls in the community and acute care settings.
  5. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention: Safe Client Handling Training for Schools of Nursing (2009). This resource was developed by the World Health Organization to create global awareness. It provides up-to-date algorithms for client transfers.
  6. Provincial Health Services Authority: Safe Client Handling (2010). These instructional video courses cover numerous topics including mechanical (ceiling) lifts, additional re-positioning techniques, transfers, and assisting a client off the floor.

Chapter 8 Attributions and References

Unit 8.3 Image Attributions

Unit 8.8 Image Attributions

Unit 8.9 Image Attributions

  • Figure 8.9.1 (Source: Kiwipoint FDA, n.d.) With permission to use from Kiwipoint FDA
  • Figure 8.9.2 (Source: Kiwipoint FDA, n.d.) With permission to use from Kiwipoint FDA
  • Figure 8.9.3 (Source: Kiwipoint FDA, n.d.) With permission to use from Kiwipoint FDA

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Personal Care Skills for Health Care Assistants Copyright © 2023 by Tracy Christianson and Kimberly Morris, Thompson Rivers University. is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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