standing hoists: to stand or not to stand?

34
STANDING HOISTS To Stand or Not to Stand AIDEEN GALLAGHER AND EMMA SMALL Risk Managed Pty Ltd 2016 AAMHP – 7 TH BIENNIAL CONFERENCE, FREMANTLE, WA 23 MAY 2016

Upload: risk-managed

Post on 13-Apr-2017

200 views

Category:

Healthcare


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Standing Hoists: To stand or not to stand?

STANDING HOISTSTo Stand or Not to Stand

AIDEEN GALLAGHER AND

EMMA SMALL© Risk Managed Pty Ltd 2016

AAMHP – 7TH BIENNIAL CONFERENCE, FREMANTLE, WA

23 MAY 2016

Page 2: Standing Hoists: To stand or not to stand?

ACTIVE TRANSFER

EASE DRESSING, TOILETING

REDUCED TIME

REDUCED MANUAL HANDLING

REDUCED COST OF CARE

Page 3: Standing Hoists: To stand or not to stand?

15FALLSin 4 years(HSE, 2015)

Some due to Standing hoists

Page 4: Standing Hoists: To stand or not to stand?

ALLIED HEALTH CULTURE (Darragh, Campo and Olson, 2009)

GOAL REHABILITATION – CHALLENGING PARTICIPANT

(Darragh, Campo and Olson, 2009)

WEANING OFF EQUIPMENT

HEALTH PROFESSIONAL NOT EQUIPMENT

Page 5: Standing Hoists: To stand or not to stand?

INJURY AVOIDANCE – GOOD BIOMECHANICS? (Darragh, Campo and Olson, 2009)

MANY TECHNIQUES ABOVE SAFETY THRESHOLD (Marras, Davis, Kirking and Bertsche, 1999)

SUPPORT WORKER FILLING THE GAP

Page 6: Standing Hoists: To stand or not to stand?

THE STAND OFF

Page 7: Standing Hoists: To stand or not to stand?

BACKGROUND

DARK DAY WHEN WE HAVE TO TAKE

THE HOIST AWAY

Page 8: Standing Hoists: To stand or not to stand?

WHAT SKILLS DOES A CARE RECEIVER NEED TO DISPLAY, FOR THE USE OF A STANDING HOIST TO BE SAFE FOR THE CARE RECEIVER AND CARE GIVER?

OUR RESEARCH QUESTION

Page 9: Standing Hoists: To stand or not to stand?

DELPHI STYLE STUDY

EXPERT PANEL – DEFINE AND DIFFERENTIATE VIEWS (Crisp, Pelletier, Duffield, Adams & Nagy, 1997)

DECLARATION OF HELSINKI - Ethics

Open Ended

Exploratory

ExploreRange

Explore Importanc

e

Page 10: Standing Hoists: To stand or not to stand?

Open Ended

Exploratory

Identify all the skills you feel a care receiver needs in standing hoist transfers ensuring the health and safety of the care giver and receiver. Identify all the skill deficits a care receiver would display for you to conclude standing hoist transfers are unsafe for care giver and receiver

STAGE 1

Page 11: Standing Hoists: To stand or not to stand?

ANAL

YSIS

QUALITATIVE METHODSDEFINITION-themes and subthemes29 CRITERIA

STAGE 1Open Ended

Exploratory

Page 12: Standing Hoists: To stand or not to stand?

ExploreRange

EXAMPLE: “WEIGHT BEARING”

MINIMUM TIMEMINIMUM PERCENTAGEMINIMUM NUMBER OF LEGS

STAGE 2

Page 13: Standing Hoists: To stand or not to stand?

ANAL

YSISQUANTITIVE METHODS

DESCRIPTIVE STATISTICS

ExploreRange STAGE 2

Page 14: Standing Hoists: To stand or not to stand?

Explore Importanc

e

29 CRITERIA

ESSENTIAL SKILLSDESIRABLE SKILLS

STAGE 3

Page 15: Standing Hoists: To stand or not to stand?

RESULTS

18 PARTICIPANTS – STAGE 1

83% ALLIED HEALTH (n=15)

11%NURSING (n=2)

6% WHS PROFESSIONAL (n=1)

Page 16: Standing Hoists: To stand or not to stand?

RESULTS

83% OVER 11 YEARS EXPERIENCE(n=15)

94%FEMALE (n=17)

29 CRITERIA

Page 17: Standing Hoists: To stand or not to stand?

RESULTS

29 CRITERIA

MINIMUM REQUIRMENT FOR CARE RECEIVER TO DISPLAY FOR BOTH CARE RECEIVER AND GIVER TO BE SAFE

Page 18: Standing Hoists: To stand or not to stand?

Minimum as-sistance from care giver (CG)

SUPINE TO SITTING ON THE BED

Page 19: Standing Hoists: To stand or not to stand?

MAINTAINED SITTING ON THE SIDE OF THE BED- SKILL LEVEL AND TIME

2 minutes5 minutes Other

Page 20: Standing Hoists: To stand or not to stand?

WEIGHT BEARING CAPACITYSKILL LEVEL AND TIME

%60-100

MINUTES

1.5-5

Page 21: Standing Hoists: To stand or not to stand?

SECURE SLING UNDER ARM

IndependentMinimum assistance by CG

MAINTAIN HANDS ON GRIP

Page 22: Standing Hoists: To stand or not to stand?

MAINTAIN FEET ON FOOTREST

IndependentlyMinimum assis-tance from SW

Page 23: Standing Hoists: To stand or not to stand?

MINIMAL TO UNIMPAIREDRECEPTIVE COMMUNICATIONCAPACITY TO FOLLOW INSTRUCTIONSLEVEL OF UNDERSTANDINGCO-OPERATIONALERTNESSPREDICTABILITY

Page 24: Standing Hoists: To stand or not to stand?

DISCUSSION

LYING TO SITTING TRANSFER MATTERS

Roll and sit 171.0 – 263.2N30 degree raise111.2 – 151N

(Fray & Hignett, 2015)

Page 25: Standing Hoists: To stand or not to stand?

DISCUSSION

1.5-5 MINUTESWHEN IS IT REHABILITATION?

Page 26: Standing Hoists: To stand or not to stand?

25%

ASSISTANCE WITH FEET

KEY POSITION OF SUPPORT?

50%

ASSISTANCE WITH HANDS

63%

ASSISTANCE WITH SLING

Page 27: Standing Hoists: To stand or not to stand?

INFORMED CONSENT?

Page 28: Standing Hoists: To stand or not to stand?

AGREEMENT ON PRESCRIPTION

Page 29: Standing Hoists: To stand or not to stand?

LIMITATIONS

LOW RESPONSE RATE

FUTURE RESEARCH

Page 31: Standing Hoists: To stand or not to stand?

REFERENCES Fray, M. & Hignett, S. (2015). An evaluation of the biomechanical risks

for a range of methods to raise a patient from supine lying to sitting in a hospital bed. Proceedings 19th Triennial Congress of the IEA, Melbourne 9-14 August 2015.

Crisp, J., Pelletier, D., Duffeild, C., Adams, A. & Nagy, S. (1997). The Delphi Method? Nursing Research, 46, 116-118.

National Health Service (2015). Patient Safety Alert: Risk of death and serious harm by falling from hoists. Alert reference number: NHS/PSA/W/2015/010. Retrieved from: ww.england.nhs.uk/patientsafety.

Depoy, E. & Gitlin, L.N. (1998). Introduction to Research: Understanding and Applying Multiple Strategies (2nd ed.). USA: Mosby.

Page 32: Standing Hoists: To stand or not to stand?

Marras, W. S., Davis, K. G., Kirking, B. C., & Bertsche, P. K. (1999). A comprehensive analysis of low-back disorder risk and spinal loading during the transferring and repositioning of patients using different techniques. Ergonomics, 42, 904–926.

McGrath, M., Taaffe, C. & Gallagher, A. (2015). An exploration of knowledge and practice of patient handling among undergraduate occupational therapy students. Disability Rehabilitation. Mar 4:1-7

Darragh AR, Campo M, Olsen D. Therapy practice within a minimal lift environ- ment: perceptions of therapy staff. Work. 2009;33:241–253.

REFERENCES

Page 33: Standing Hoists: To stand or not to stand?

MEDIAHoist 1 By

Allegro Concepts Copyright

Re-produced with permisson

Hoist 2 By Allegro Concepts Copyright

Re-produced with permission

Occupational Therapist

byIsle of Man Government

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/

Addition of box with text

Care Giver By Istock Re-produced with permission

Stand off #2 by Nilahhttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/

Addition of text – stand off

A dark sky, dead tree.

by cjcazelhttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/

Books By Istock Re-produced with permission

Shopping! by joe jukes Is licenced under CC by 2.0 Addition of text box

measuring tape

by Sean MacEnteehttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ Addition of text box

Marking Pile 1/X

by Samhttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/

Books for Cooks

by Sela Yairhttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/

Page 34: Standing Hoists: To stand or not to stand?

Rest your head by Jason Trbovich Is licenced under CC by 2.0

Addition of text box

Feet by Arnoooo is licenced by CC sa 2.0

Addition of textHand modeling by Nate Steiner is licenced by CC zero Addition of text

34 by Namu Lim Is licenced under CC by 2.0 Additio of text

Intrigued by Nicolas Alejandro Is licenced under CC by 2.0

Addition of text

Opportunity by Quinn Dombrowski

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/2.0/ Addition of text

Contracts byGovernment of Alberta

https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/ Addition of text

Classroom by Victor Björkund

https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ Addition of text

MEDIA