Investigating the impact of a falls prevention community of practice in a residential aged-care setting: A mixed methods study protocol

© 2015 John Wiley & Sons Ltd. Aim: The aim of this study was to facilitate the implementation and operation of a falls prevention Community of Practice in a residential aged-care organization and evaluate its effect on falls outcomes. Background: Falls are a substantial concern across the reside...

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Main Authors: Francis-Coad, J., Etherton-Beer, C., Bulsara, C., Nobre, D., Hill, Anne-Marie
Format: Journal Article
Published: 2015
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/40417
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author Francis-Coad, J.
Etherton-Beer, C.
Bulsara, C.
Nobre, D.
Hill, Anne-Marie
author_facet Francis-Coad, J.
Etherton-Beer, C.
Bulsara, C.
Nobre, D.
Hill, Anne-Marie
author_sort Francis-Coad, J.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description © 2015 John Wiley & Sons Ltd. Aim: The aim of this study was to facilitate the implementation and operation of a falls prevention Community of Practice in a residential aged-care organization and evaluate its effect on falls outcomes. Background: Falls are a substantial concern across the residential aged-care sector with half its older population falling annually. Preventing falls requires tailoring of current evidence for reducing falls and adoption into daily activity, which is challenging for diversely skilled staff caring for a frailer population. Forming a community of practice could provide staff with the opportunity to share and develop their expertise in falls prevention and innovate change. Design: A mixed methods design based on a realist approach conducted across 13 residential care facilities (N = 779 beds). Method: Staff will be invited to become a member of the community of practice with all sites represented. The community of practice will be supported to audit falls prevention activity and identify gaps in practice for intervention. The impact of the community of practice will be evaluated at three levels: individual member level, facility level and organizational level. A pre-post design using a range of standardized measures supported by audits, surveys, focus groups and interviews will determine its effect on falls prevention practice. Falls outcomes will be compared at five time intervals using negative binomial regression and logistic regression. The study is funded 2013-2017. Conclusion: Findings from this research will assist residential aged-care providers to understand how to effectively translate evidence about falls prevention into clinical practice.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-404172017-09-13T13:37:32Z Investigating the impact of a falls prevention community of practice in a residential aged-care setting: A mixed methods study protocol Francis-Coad, J. Etherton-Beer, C. Bulsara, C. Nobre, D. Hill, Anne-Marie © 2015 John Wiley & Sons Ltd. Aim: The aim of this study was to facilitate the implementation and operation of a falls prevention Community of Practice in a residential aged-care organization and evaluate its effect on falls outcomes. Background: Falls are a substantial concern across the residential aged-care sector with half its older population falling annually. Preventing falls requires tailoring of current evidence for reducing falls and adoption into daily activity, which is challenging for diversely skilled staff caring for a frailer population. Forming a community of practice could provide staff with the opportunity to share and develop their expertise in falls prevention and innovate change. Design: A mixed methods design based on a realist approach conducted across 13 residential care facilities (N = 779 beds). Method: Staff will be invited to become a member of the community of practice with all sites represented. The community of practice will be supported to audit falls prevention activity and identify gaps in practice for intervention. The impact of the community of practice will be evaluated at three levels: individual member level, facility level and organizational level. A pre-post design using a range of standardized measures supported by audits, surveys, focus groups and interviews will determine its effect on falls prevention practice. Falls outcomes will be compared at five time intervals using negative binomial regression and logistic regression. The study is funded 2013-2017. Conclusion: Findings from this research will assist residential aged-care providers to understand how to effectively translate evidence about falls prevention into clinical practice. 2015 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/40417 10.1111/jan.12725 restricted
spellingShingle Francis-Coad, J.
Etherton-Beer, C.
Bulsara, C.
Nobre, D.
Hill, Anne-Marie
Investigating the impact of a falls prevention community of practice in a residential aged-care setting: A mixed methods study protocol
title Investigating the impact of a falls prevention community of practice in a residential aged-care setting: A mixed methods study protocol
title_full Investigating the impact of a falls prevention community of practice in a residential aged-care setting: A mixed methods study protocol
title_fullStr Investigating the impact of a falls prevention community of practice in a residential aged-care setting: A mixed methods study protocol
title_full_unstemmed Investigating the impact of a falls prevention community of practice in a residential aged-care setting: A mixed methods study protocol
title_short Investigating the impact of a falls prevention community of practice in a residential aged-care setting: A mixed methods study protocol
title_sort investigating the impact of a falls prevention community of practice in a residential aged-care setting: a mixed methods study protocol
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/40417