Implementation fidelity of a nurse-led falls prevention program in acute hospitals during the 6-PACK trial

Background: When tested in a randomized controlled trial (RCT) of 31,411 patients, the nurse-led 6-PACK falls prevention program did not reduce falls. Poor implementation fidelity (i.e., program not implemented as intended) may explain this result. Despite repeated calls for the examination of imple...

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Main Authors: Morello, R., Barker, A., Ayton, D., Landgren, F., Kamar, J., Hill, Keith, Brand, C., Sherrington, C., Wolfe, R., Rifat, S., Stoelwinder, J.
Format: Journal Article
Published: BioMed Central 2017
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/54035
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author Morello, R.
Barker, A.
Ayton, D.
Landgren, F.
Kamar, J.
Hill, Keith
Brand, C.
Sherrington, C.
Wolfe, R.
Rifat, S.
Stoelwinder, J.
author_facet Morello, R.
Barker, A.
Ayton, D.
Landgren, F.
Kamar, J.
Hill, Keith
Brand, C.
Sherrington, C.
Wolfe, R.
Rifat, S.
Stoelwinder, J.
author_sort Morello, R.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Background: When tested in a randomized controlled trial (RCT) of 31,411 patients, the nurse-led 6-PACK falls prevention program did not reduce falls. Poor implementation fidelity (i.e., program not implemented as intended) may explain this result. Despite repeated calls for the examination of implementation fidelity as an essential component of evaluating interventions designed to improve the delivery of care, it has been neglected in prior falls prevention studies. This study examined implementation fidelity of the 6-PACK program during a large multi-site RCT. Methods: Based on the 6-PACK implementation framework and intervention description, implementation fidelity was examined by quantifying adherence to program components and organizational support. Adherence indicators were: 1) falls-risk tool completion; and for patients classified as high-risk, provision of 2) a ‘Falls alert’ sign; and 3) at least one additional 6-PACK intervention. Organizational support indicators were: 1) provision of resources (executive sponsorship, site clinical leaders and equipment); 2) implementation activities (modification of patient care plans; training; implementation tailoring; audits, reminders and feedback; and provision of data); and 3) program acceptability. Data were collected from daily bedside observation, medical records, resource utilization diaries and nurse surveys. Results: All seven intervention components were delivered on the 12 intervention wards. Program adherence data were collected from 103,398 observations and medical record audits. The falls-risk tool was completed each day for 75% of patients. Of the 38% of patients classified as high-risk, 79% had a ‘Falls alert’ sign and 63% were provided with at least one additional 6-PACK intervention, as recommended. All hospitals provided the recommended resources and undertook the nine outlined program implementation activities. Most of the nurses surveyed considered program components important for falls prevention. Conclusions: While implementation fidelity was variable across wards, overall it was found to be acceptable during the RCT. Implementation failure is unlikely to be a key factor for the observed lack of program effectiveness in the 6-PACK trial. Trial registration: The 6-PACK cluster RCT is registered with the Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry, number ACTRN12611000332921 (29 March 2011).
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-540352017-09-21T06:21:40Z Implementation fidelity of a nurse-led falls prevention program in acute hospitals during the 6-PACK trial Morello, R. Barker, A. Ayton, D. Landgren, F. Kamar, J. Hill, Keith Brand, C. Sherrington, C. Wolfe, R. Rifat, S. Stoelwinder, J. Background: When tested in a randomized controlled trial (RCT) of 31,411 patients, the nurse-led 6-PACK falls prevention program did not reduce falls. Poor implementation fidelity (i.e., program not implemented as intended) may explain this result. Despite repeated calls for the examination of implementation fidelity as an essential component of evaluating interventions designed to improve the delivery of care, it has been neglected in prior falls prevention studies. This study examined implementation fidelity of the 6-PACK program during a large multi-site RCT. Methods: Based on the 6-PACK implementation framework and intervention description, implementation fidelity was examined by quantifying adherence to program components and organizational support. Adherence indicators were: 1) falls-risk tool completion; and for patients classified as high-risk, provision of 2) a ‘Falls alert’ sign; and 3) at least one additional 6-PACK intervention. Organizational support indicators were: 1) provision of resources (executive sponsorship, site clinical leaders and equipment); 2) implementation activities (modification of patient care plans; training; implementation tailoring; audits, reminders and feedback; and provision of data); and 3) program acceptability. Data were collected from daily bedside observation, medical records, resource utilization diaries and nurse surveys. Results: All seven intervention components were delivered on the 12 intervention wards. Program adherence data were collected from 103,398 observations and medical record audits. The falls-risk tool was completed each day for 75% of patients. Of the 38% of patients classified as high-risk, 79% had a ‘Falls alert’ sign and 63% were provided with at least one additional 6-PACK intervention, as recommended. All hospitals provided the recommended resources and undertook the nine outlined program implementation activities. Most of the nurses surveyed considered program components important for falls prevention. Conclusions: While implementation fidelity was variable across wards, overall it was found to be acceptable during the RCT. Implementation failure is unlikely to be a key factor for the observed lack of program effectiveness in the 6-PACK trial. Trial registration: The 6-PACK cluster RCT is registered with the Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry, number ACTRN12611000332921 (29 March 2011). 2017 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/54035 10.1186/s12913-017-2315-z http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ BioMed Central fulltext
spellingShingle Morello, R.
Barker, A.
Ayton, D.
Landgren, F.
Kamar, J.
Hill, Keith
Brand, C.
Sherrington, C.
Wolfe, R.
Rifat, S.
Stoelwinder, J.
Implementation fidelity of a nurse-led falls prevention program in acute hospitals during the 6-PACK trial
title Implementation fidelity of a nurse-led falls prevention program in acute hospitals during the 6-PACK trial
title_full Implementation fidelity of a nurse-led falls prevention program in acute hospitals during the 6-PACK trial
title_fullStr Implementation fidelity of a nurse-led falls prevention program in acute hospitals during the 6-PACK trial
title_full_unstemmed Implementation fidelity of a nurse-led falls prevention program in acute hospitals during the 6-PACK trial
title_short Implementation fidelity of a nurse-led falls prevention program in acute hospitals during the 6-PACK trial
title_sort implementation fidelity of a nurse-led falls prevention program in acute hospitals during the 6-pack trial
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/54035