Measuring falls events in acute hospitals - A comparison of three reporting methods to identify missing data in the hospital reporting system

OBJECTIVES: To compare three different methods of falls reporting and examine the characteristics of the data missing from the hospital incident reporting system. DESIGN: Fourteen-month prospective observational study nested within a randomized controlled trial. SETTING: Rehabilitation, stroke, medi...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hill, Anne-Marie, Hoffmann, T., Hill, Keith, Oliver, D., Beer, C., McPhail, S., Brauer, S., Haines, T.
Format: Journal Article
Published: Wiley-Blackwell Publishing, Inc. 2010
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/3662
_version_ 1848744293009719296
author Hill, Anne-Marie
Hoffmann, T.
Hill, Keith
Oliver, D.
Beer, C.
McPhail, S.
Brauer, S.
Haines, T.
author_facet Hill, Anne-Marie
Hoffmann, T.
Hill, Keith
Oliver, D.
Beer, C.
McPhail, S.
Brauer, S.
Haines, T.
author_sort Hill, Anne-Marie
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description OBJECTIVES: To compare three different methods of falls reporting and examine the characteristics of the data missing from the hospital incident reporting system. DESIGN: Fourteen-month prospective observational study nested within a randomized controlled trial. SETTING: Rehabilitation, stroke, medical, surgical, and orthopedic wards in Perth and Brisbane, Australia. PARTICIPANTS: Fallers (n=153) who were part of a larger trial (1,206 participants, mean age 75.1±11.0). MEASUREMENTS: Three falls events reporting measures: participants' self-report of fall events, fall events reported in participants' case notes, and falls events reported through the hospital reporting systems. RESULTS: The three reporting systems identified 245 falls events in total. Participants' case notes captured 226 (92.2%) falls events, hospital incident reporting systems captured 185 (75.5%) falls events, and participant self-report captured 147 (60.2%) falls events. Falls events were significantly less likely to be recorded in hospital reporting systems when a participant sustained a subsequent fall, (P=.01) or when the fall occurred in the morning shift (P=.01) or afternoon shift (P=.01). CONCLUSION: Falls data missing from hospital incident report systems are not missing completely at random and therefore will introduce bias in some analyses if the factor investigated is related to whether the data is missing. Multimodal approaches to collecting falls data are preferable to relying on a single source alone. © 2010, The American Geriatrics Society.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T05:59:09Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-3662
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T05:59:09Z
publishDate 2010
publisher Wiley-Blackwell Publishing, Inc.
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-36622018-05-28T03:57:23Z Measuring falls events in acute hospitals - A comparison of three reporting methods to identify missing data in the hospital reporting system Hill, Anne-Marie Hoffmann, T. Hill, Keith Oliver, D. Beer, C. McPhail, S. Brauer, S. Haines, T. OBJECTIVES: To compare three different methods of falls reporting and examine the characteristics of the data missing from the hospital incident reporting system. DESIGN: Fourteen-month prospective observational study nested within a randomized controlled trial. SETTING: Rehabilitation, stroke, medical, surgical, and orthopedic wards in Perth and Brisbane, Australia. PARTICIPANTS: Fallers (n=153) who were part of a larger trial (1,206 participants, mean age 75.1±11.0). MEASUREMENTS: Three falls events reporting measures: participants' self-report of fall events, fall events reported in participants' case notes, and falls events reported through the hospital reporting systems. RESULTS: The three reporting systems identified 245 falls events in total. Participants' case notes captured 226 (92.2%) falls events, hospital incident reporting systems captured 185 (75.5%) falls events, and participant self-report captured 147 (60.2%) falls events. Falls events were significantly less likely to be recorded in hospital reporting systems when a participant sustained a subsequent fall, (P=.01) or when the fall occurred in the morning shift (P=.01) or afternoon shift (P=.01). CONCLUSION: Falls data missing from hospital incident report systems are not missing completely at random and therefore will introduce bias in some analyses if the factor investigated is related to whether the data is missing. Multimodal approaches to collecting falls data are preferable to relying on a single source alone. © 2010, The American Geriatrics Society. 2010 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/3662 10.1111/j.1532-5415.2010.02856.x Wiley-Blackwell Publishing, Inc. fulltext
spellingShingle Hill, Anne-Marie
Hoffmann, T.
Hill, Keith
Oliver, D.
Beer, C.
McPhail, S.
Brauer, S.
Haines, T.
Measuring falls events in acute hospitals - A comparison of three reporting methods to identify missing data in the hospital reporting system
title Measuring falls events in acute hospitals - A comparison of three reporting methods to identify missing data in the hospital reporting system
title_full Measuring falls events in acute hospitals - A comparison of three reporting methods to identify missing data in the hospital reporting system
title_fullStr Measuring falls events in acute hospitals - A comparison of three reporting methods to identify missing data in the hospital reporting system
title_full_unstemmed Measuring falls events in acute hospitals - A comparison of three reporting methods to identify missing data in the hospital reporting system
title_short Measuring falls events in acute hospitals - A comparison of three reporting methods to identify missing data in the hospital reporting system
title_sort measuring falls events in acute hospitals - a comparison of three reporting methods to identify missing data in the hospital reporting system
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/3662