Adult Inpatients’ Perceptions of Their Fall Risk: A Scoping Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Background
3. Aims
4. Methods
4.1. Design
4.2. Search Strategy
4.3. Screening and Eligibility
4.4. Quality Appraisal
4.5. Data Charting
4.6. Data Synthesis
5. Results
5.1. Article Characteristics
5.2. Demographics
5.3. Description of Fall Risk Perception Measures
5.4. Description of Patients’ Perceptions of Fall Risk
5.5. Description of Patients’ Perceptions of Falling in Hospital
5.6. Description of Patients’ Fear of Falling
5.7. Description of Barriers to Fall Prevention in Hospital
6. Discussion
7. Implications for Future Research
8. Limitations
9. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. SR Protocol V5
Appendix B
Author, Year and Country | Study Aim | Study Design | Population | Fall Risk Perception Outcome Measures | Main Findings | Quality Appraisal |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Beh et al. (2019), Ireland “Older inpatients’ experience and insights into fear of falling: A feasibility study” | To evaluate the effects of acute hospitalisation on fear of falling (FoF) among older adults and to evaluate older adults’ perceptions of risk factors, interventions and coping strategies for FoF | Mixed methods, single-item question and the FES-I. Patients with FOF completed a questionnaire. Descriptive statistics; qualitative data were presented as frequencies. | 32 older inpatients aged > 65 years Mean age (SD): 75 (5) | Single-item question (SIQ), “are you afraid of falling?” Fall Efficacy Scale International (FES-I) |
| 57% (MMAT) |
Byrd (2021), USA “The relationship between anosognosia for hemiplegia after stroke and fall events in the acute inpatient stroke rehabilitation population” | To explore the association between the presence of anosognosia for hemiplegia after stroke and patient fall events | Doctoral dissertation Prospective correlational study | 16 ischaemic stroke patients in acute inpatient rehabilitation Mean age (SD): 57 (15.1) | Not specific to falls: Visual Analogue Test for Assessing Anosognosia for motor impairment |
| Thesis |
Cerilo (2016), USA “Effectiveness of fall prevention multimedia program on patient awareness, self-efficacy and engagement” | To examine the effects of a multimedia program on hospitalised adults’ levels of fall risk awareness, self-efficacy and engagement in fall prevention | Doctoral dissertation Quasi- experimental study | 60 inpatients in acute care aged >65 years Age range: 65 to 90 | Falls Risk Awareness Questionnaire: 22 items Falls Efficacy Scale (FES) |
| Thesis |
Çinarli and Koç (2017), Turkey “Fear and risk of falling, activities of daily living and quality of life” | To describe risk and FoF in older adults seeking care in the ED and to explore relationships between risk and FoF with activities of daily living and quality of life | Cross-sectional study Structured questionnaires | 151 older adults aged >65 years Mean age (SD): 72.7 (6.25) | FES |
| 50% (CASP) |
Cox and Vassallo (2015), UK “Fear of falling assessments in older people with dementia” | To outline the key issues in relation to FoF, current guidelines and assessment tools and their use for people with dementia | Systematic literature review | 4 studies | FES, FES-I, Icon FES |
| 75% (SANRA) |
Dadgari et al. (2020), Iran “The relationship between the risk of falling and fear of falling among aged hospitalized patients” | To determine the relationship between falling and fear of falling among aged hospitalised patients | Descriptive correlational study Questionnaires | 385 hospitalised patients aged >60 years Mean age (SD): 71.68 (9.32) | FES |
| 58% (CASP) |
Eckert et al. (2020), Germany “Correlates of fear of falling and falls efficacy in geriatric patients recovering from hip/pelvic fracture” | To gain a better understanding about the nature of fear of falling by analysing associations between psychological and physical aspects related to fear of falling and fall efficacy in hip/pelvic fracture patients | Baseline data of a randomised controlled trial (RCT) No interventions: cross-sectional data analyses completed | 115 inpatients with hip/pelvic fracture aged >60 years Mean age (SD): 82.5 (6.8) | Short Fall Efficacy Scale International (Short FES-I), Perceived Ability to Manage Falls, SIQ FoF, Fall-related post-traumatic stress symptoms |
| 83% (CASP) |
Gettens and Fulbrook (2015), Australia “Fear of falling: association between the Modified Falls Efficacy scale, in-hospital falls and hospital length of stay” | To investigate the relationships between fear of falling, fall risk, in-hospital falls and hospital length of stay | Observational non-experimental Design Descriptive and inferential statistics | 141 inpatients (age range 17 to 95 years) Mean age (SD): 73.6 (15.5) | Modified FES (MFES) |
| 75% (CASP) |
Gettens et al. (2018), Australia “The patients’ perspective of sustaining a fall in hospital: A qualitative study” | To understand the patient’s perspective of falling in hospital | Qualitative -phenomenological Unstructured individualised interviews | 12 hospital inpatients who had recently fallen (27 to 84 years) Mean age: 66 | Thematic analysis: Van Manen’s approach |
| 90% (CASP) |
Ghaffari- Rafi et al. (2019), USA “Case report on fear of falling syndrome: A debilitating but curable gait disorder” | A case study on a patient with fear of falling syndrome | Case report | 70-year-old male presenting to ED | Case report: FES-I |
| 75% (JBI) |
Greenberg et al. (2016), USA “Perceived fall risk and functional decline: Gender differences in patient’s willingness to discuss fall risk, fall history, or to have a home safety evaluation” | To determine patient perceptions about their perceived fall risk compared to their actual risk of functional decline and death | Pilot prospective Study Descriptive and inferential statistics | 146 adults presenting to ED aged >50 years Mean age (SD): 69 (11.4) | Shortened FES |
| 50% (CASP) |
Haines et al. (2012), Australia “Why do hospitalized older adults take risks that may lead to falls?” | To understand why older adults take risks that may lead to falls in the hospital setting and in the transition period following discharge home | Qualitative, phenomenological constructivist approach Semi-structured in-depth interviews and focus groups | Hospital patients aged >65 years (n = 16) Informal caregivers (n = 8) Health professionals (n = 33) Mean age (SD) of older adults: 75.4 (6.9) | Framework analysis |
| 100% (CASP) |
Hauer et al. (2020), Germany “Mismatch of subjective and objective risk of falling in patients with dementia” | To analyse the mismatch between objective and subjective fall risk and associated factors in people with dementia | Cohort study Short FES-I, mobility assessments, functional assessments and psychological and fall-related behavioural strategies | 173 inpatients with mild to moderate dementia Mean age (SD): 83.60 (6.16) | Short FES-I |
| 75% (CASP) |
Hill et al. (2016), Australia “My independent streak may get in the way: how older adults respond to falls prevention education in hospital” | To determine how providing individualised fall prevention education facilitated behaviour change from the perspective of older hospital patients on rehabilitation wards and what barriers they identified to engaging in preventive strategies | Prospective Qualitative Semi-structured questionnaire | Older patients (n = 610) aged >60 years, cognitively intact Mean age (SD): 81.4 (9.3) | Deductive content analysis |
| 90% (CASP) |
Hoke and Zekany (2020), USA “Two sides to every fall: Patient and nurse perspectives” | To describe and categorise patient and nurse perspectives on falls and nurses’ suggestions for preventing falls | Qualitative descriptive study Individual bedside interviews providing narrative responses | 67 patient falls (age range from 22 to 88 years) Mean age: 61 | Content analysis |
| 70% (CASP) |
Huang et al. (2015), Taiwan “The effectiveness of a participatory program on fall prevention in oncology patients” | To explore the effect of a participatory program on patients’ knowledge and self-efficacy of fall prevention and fall incidence in an oncology ward | Quasi- experimental study Pre-test and post-test to assess fall knowledge and self-efficacy | 68 oncology patients (age range 19 to 77 years) Mean age: 47.8 | 15-item subscale about patients’ self-efficacy of fall prevention |
| 89% (JBI) |
Kakhki et al. (2018), Iran “Fear of falling and related factors among older adults with hypertension in Tehran, Iran” | To evaluate the factors involved in FoF in the elderly population with hypertension in Tehran, Iran | Descriptive correlative study Descriptive and inferential statistics | 301 adults aged >60 years admitted to hospital Mean age (SD): 68.62 (6.82) | FES-I (Persian) FES-I |
| 50% (CASP) |
Kiyoshi-Teo et al. (2019), USA “Older hospital inpatients’ fall risk factors, perceptions, and daily activities to prevent falling” | To identify associations among patient fall risk factors, perceptions and daily activities to improve patient engagement with fall prevention among hospitalised older adults | Cross-sectional Study Validated questionnaires | 67 hospitalised patients aged >65 years Mean age (SD): 73.1 (6.4) | Short FES: 7-item Falls Behavioural Scale- Inpatient (FaB-I) |
| 83% (CASP) |
Kiyoshi-Teo et al. (2020), USA “Qualitative descriptions of patient perceptions about fall risks, prevention strategies and self-identity: Analysis of fall prevention Motivational Interviewing conversations” | To understand how older adults respond to fall prevention and identify attributes that affect their responses to fall prevention | Qualitative Individual motivational interviewing | 30 hospital inpatients aged >65 years Mean age (SD): 72.83 (6.0) | Content analysis |
| 90% (CASP) |
Knox (2018), USA “Fall risk perceptions: A study of hospitalized patients with hematologic malignancies” | To describe the patient perceptions of fall risk in people with haematologic malignancies and compare patient and nurse perceptions of fall risk | Mixed methods Descriptive statistics and narrative analyses | 15 hospitalised participants Age range: 36 to 86 years | Open-ended interview format to examine self-report of patients’ perceptions of fall risk |
| 71% (MMAT) |
Kronborg et al. (2016), Denmark “Physical activity in the acute ward following hip fracture surgery is associated with less fear of falling” | To objectively measure the physical activity the first week after hip fracture surgery and relate it to functional performance and fear of falling at discharge | Observational Study Functional measures, accelerometer, questionnaires | 38 older adults aged >65 years at a hip fracture unit Mean age (SD): 80 (8.4) | Short FES-I |
| 75% (CASP) |
Kuhlenschmidt et al. (2016), USA “Tailoring education to perceived fall risk in hospitalized patients with cancer” | To determine the effect of tailored, nurse-delivered interventions as compared to a control group on patient perception of risk of falls, confidence in fall prevention and willingness to ask for assistance | Randomised controlled design Provision of individualised education tailored to the nurse’s risk assessment and the patient’s perception of fall risk | 91 participants with cancer (n = 47 in control group and n = 44 in intervention group) Mean age (SD): 58.79 (14.25) | Patients self-reported their perceived risk of falls, their confidence to prevent a fall and their willingness to ask for assistance |
| 73% (CASP) |
Lim, Ang, et al. (2018), Singapore “Patients’ experience after a fall and their perceptions of fall prevention: A qualitative study” | To explore the experiences of patients who had a fall and their perspectives toward fall prevention in the acute care setting | Qualitative– exploratory, descriptive study Individual interviews one day after hospital fall | 100 patients Mean age (SD): 65.2 (12.1) | Inductive content analysis |
| 90% (CASP) |
Lim, Seow, et al. (2018), Singapore “Disparity between perceived and physiological risks of falling among older patients in an acute care hospital” | To describe differences between perceived and actual physiological risk of falling among older adults and to explore factors associated with the differences | Prospective cohort study Perceived fall risk measures and physiological fall risk scale | 300 inpatients (age >65 years) Mean age (SD): 75.3 (6.2) | Single item: “are you afraid of falling?” FES-I |
| 83% (CASP) |
Mihaljcic et al. (2015), Australia “Self-awareness of falls risk among elderly patients: Characterizing awareness deficits and exploring associated factors” | To characterise self-awareness in older adults undergoing inpatient rehabilitation and explore factors associated with reduced awareness of fall risk | Prospective, cross-sectional SAFRM, timed up and go test and cognition | 91 older adults undergoing inpatient rehabilitation aged >60 years Mean age (SD): 77.97 (8.04) | Self-awareness of falls risk (SAFRM): 31 items |
| 83% (CASP) |
Mihaljcic et al. (2017), Australia “Investigating the relationship between reduced self-awareness of falls risk, rehabilitation engagement and falls in older adults” | To investigate whether self-awareness of fall risk is associated with rehabilitation engagement, motivation for rehabilitation and number of falls after hospital discharge | Correlational study Questionnaires including SAFRM, rehabilitation engagement, motivation for rehabilitation, cognition and functional ability | 91 inpatients in rehabilitation (age range: 62 to 93 years) Mean age (SD): 77.97 (8.04) | Self-awareness of falls risk (SAFRM): 31 items |
| 83% (CASP) |
Mion (2016), USA “When the falls expert becomes the fall risk patient: Through the looking-glass” | Personal experience as a fall risk patient | Case report | Author’s personal experience Age: 60 | Personal experience |
| 88% (JBI) |
Nguyen et Al. (2020), Vietnam “Fear of falling among older patients admitted to hospital after falls in Vietnam: Prevalence, associated factors and correlation with impaired health-related quality of life” | To examine the fear of falling in older patients hospitalised due to fall injuries, its effect on health-related quality of life and its associated factors | Secondary analysis from a multi-site cross-sectional study Structured questionnaire via face-to-face interviews | 405 inpatients (aged >60 years) Mean age (SD): 71.9 (9.0) | Single close-ended Question: “Are you afraid of falling?” |
| 75% (CASP) |
Peeters et al. (2020), Ireland “Understanding the aetiology of fear of falling from the perspective of a fear-avoidance model: A narrative review” | To review the literature on physiological, mood and cognitive factors associated with fear of falling and to interpret these findings in the context of a fear- avoidance model that provides a causal framework for the development of FoF | Narrative review | 52 studies | Data was synthesized on a narrative level to generate several hypotheses of the mechanisms explaining FoF |
| 83% (SANRA) |
Pena (2019), USA “Patient perception of fall risk and high fall risk screening scores” | To describe the relationship between patient perception of fall risk and high fall risk screening scores | Doctoral dissertation Descriptive correlational design | 201 inpatients (aged >65 years) Mean age (SD): 77.1 (7.9) | Four scales: The fear of falling while hospitalised scale, the confidence to engage in fall prevention scale, the intention to engage in fall prevention scale and the consequences of falling while hospitalised scale |
| Thesis |
Radecki et Al. (2018), USA “Inpatient fall prevention from the patient’s perspective: A qualitative study” | To describe the patient’s perspective of fall prevention in an acute care setting to aid in the design of patient-centred strategies | Qualitative Semi- structured interviews | 12 inpatients (age range: 38 to 89 years) Mean age: 65.2 | Thematic analysis |
| 90% (CASP) |
Rizwan et al. (2020), Pakistan “Fear of falling among sub-acute stroke patients in Lahore, Pakistan” | To compare fear of fall (lack of self-confidence to maintain balance during normal activity) with and without fall history among sub-acute stroke patients in Lahore, Pakistan | Cross-sectional study | 66 sub-acute stroke patients (age range: 40 to 75 years) | FES-I |
| 58% (CASP) |
Savas et al. (2019), Turkey “Factors related to falls and the fear of falling in Turkish elderly patients admitted to emergency department” | To investigate the fear of falling and admissions related to falls, as well as the factors associated with each of them, among elderly patients who are admitted to the ED | Cross-sectional Study Descriptive and inferential statistics | 555 older adults presenting to ED aged >65 Years Mean age (SD): 76.7 (7.6) | SIQ: fear of falling |
| 67% (CASP) |
Scholz et al. (2021), USA “Fear of falling and falls in people with multiple sclerosis: A literature review” | To provide an overview of existing research on the effects of FoF and therapy options in multiple sclerosis (MS) | Literature review | 35 articles | FES-I, 7-item FES-I, 10-item FES, Survey of Activities and FoF in the Elderly, Spinal Cord Injury Fall Concerns Scale, Fear of Falling Avoidance Behaviour Questionnaire, Activities-specific Balance and Confidence Scale, University of Illinois at Chicago FoF measure |
| 92% (SANRA) |
Shankar et al. (2017), USA “Exploring older adult ED fall patients’ understanding of their fall: A qualitative study” | To understand older patients’ perspectives about their fall, fall risk factors and attitude towards emergency department fall- prevention interventions | Qualitative Semi-structured interviews | 63 participants aged >65 years at the ED following a fall Mean age (SD): 79.9 (8.5) | Thematic analysis |
| 80% (CASP) |
Shuman et al. (2016), USA “Patient perceptions and experiences with falls during hospitalization and after discharge” | To describe hospitalised older adults’ (>60 years) perceptions about their fall risks while hospitalised, the fall prevention interventions received while hospitalised and their fall prevention discharge instructions | Qualitative– prospective, exploratory Two individualised semi-structured interviews per participant (during hospitalisation and via telephone post-discharge | 15 patients (aged >60 years) 3 participants completed the first interview only Mean age (SD): 72 (10.86) | Constant comparative methods |
| 90% (CASP) |
Sonnad et al. (2014), USA “Do patients accurately perceive their fall risk?” | To document patient perceptions of their inpatient fall risk and determine how these perceptions were associated with clinical indicators of fall risk | Prospective survey-based design Survey and medical record to obtain Schmid score | 92 inpatients Mean age: 60.77 | Single close-ended question: “Are you afraid of falling?” |
| 58% (CASP) |
Turner et al. (2019), UK “The perceptions and rehabilitation experience of older people after falling in the hospital” | To explore the experiences of older patients who fell during their hospital stays | Qualitative– exploratory Semi-structured interviews, incident reports and medical records | 5 inpatients (age range: 77 to 88 years) Mean age: 81.2 | Thematic, discourse and descriptive analysis |
| 100% (CASP) |
Twibell et al. (2020), USA “Perspectives of inpatients with cancer on engagement in fall prevention” | To explore perspectives of hospitalised adults with cancer regarding engagement in fall prevention plans. The secondary aim was to compare fall-related perspectives of patients who had and who had not fallen | Qualitative– descriptive, exploratory Individual interviews at the bedside | 30 inpatients with cancer (age range: 26 to 92 years) Mean age: 65.4 | Thematic analysis |
| 100% (CASP) |
Twibell et al. (2015), USA “Perceptions related to falls and fall prevention among hospitalized adults” | To explore hospitalised adults’ perceptions related to risk of falling, fear of falling, expectations of outcomes of falling and intention to engage in behaviours to prevent falls | Correlational study 4 questionnaires and 3 single-item surveys | 158 acute inpatients (age range 31 to 98 years) Mean age (SD): 69.9 (13.37) | The Confidence to Perform Without Falling Scale, Fear of Falling While Hospitalised Scale, Consequences of Falling While Hospitalised Scale, Intention to Engage in Fall Prevention scale and 3 single-item surveys: perceived likelihood of falling while hospitalised, perceived likelihood of injury if they did fall while hospitalised and perceived fear of falling |
| 83% (CASP) |
Zhang et al. (2021), China “Incidence and risk factors related to fear of falling during the first mobilisation after total knee arthroplasty among older patients with knee osteoarthritis: A cross-sectional study” | To examine the fear of falling among patients who underwent a TKA and to determine the factors that are associated with that fear | Cross-sectional study Validated questionnaires | 285 inpatients aged >65 years who had a TKA Mean age (SD): 75.2 (6.4) | Single close-ended question: “In general, are you afraid of falling?” |
| 83% (CASP) |
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Search Term | Variation |
---|---|
Fall * | Risk of falls |
Risk of falling | |
Fall risk | |
Hospital | Ward |
Acute setting | |
Emergency department | |
Inpatient | |
Perception | Attitude |
Perspective | |
Opinion | |
View | |
Experience | |
Understanding | |
Insight | |
Self-awareness | |
Awareness | |
Fear of falling | |
Anosognosia | |
Ptophobia | |
NOT community | Community-dwelling |
Home | |
Residential care | |
Aged care | |
NOT paediatric | Pediatric |
Children |
Types of Studies | No. of Studies |
---|---|
Systematic literature reviews | 2 |
Narrative reviews | 1 |
Mixed methods studies | 2 |
Qualitative studies | 11 |
Randomised controlled trials | 2 |
Quasi-experimental studies | 1 |
Cross-sectional studies | 7 |
Correlational studies | 8 |
Cohort studies | 2 |
Doctoral dissertations | 3 |
Case reports | 2 |
Total | 41 |
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Dabkowski, E.; Cooper, S.; Duncan, J.R.; Missen, K. Adult Inpatients’ Perceptions of Their Fall Risk: A Scoping Review. Healthcare 2022, 10, 995. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10060995
Dabkowski E, Cooper S, Duncan JR, Missen K. Adult Inpatients’ Perceptions of Their Fall Risk: A Scoping Review. Healthcare. 2022; 10(6):995. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10060995
Chicago/Turabian StyleDabkowski, Elissa, Simon Cooper, Jhodie R. Duncan, and Karen Missen. 2022. "Adult Inpatients’ Perceptions of Their Fall Risk: A Scoping Review" Healthcare 10, no. 6: 995. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10060995
APA StyleDabkowski, E., Cooper, S., Duncan, J. R., & Missen, K. (2022). Adult Inpatients’ Perceptions of Their Fall Risk: A Scoping Review. Healthcare, 10(6), 995. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10060995