Background: Falls are common among older people and persons with dementia constitute an additional risk group.Methods: The study had a cross-sectional design and included nursing staff (n = 63, response rate 66%) working in four special care units for older persons with dementia. Data collection was conducted with a questionnaire consisting of 64 questions.Results: The respondents reported that the individuals' mental and physical impairment constitute the most frequent causes of falls. The findings also revealed a lack of, or uncertainty about, routines of documentation and reporting fall-risk and fall-preventing interventions. Respondents who had been employed in the care units more than five years reported to a higher degree that colours and material on floors caused falls. RNs considered the residents' autonomy and freedom of movement as a cause of falls to a significantly higher degree than ENs. RNs also reported a significantly longer time than ENs before fall incidents were discovered, and they used conversation and closeness as fall-preventing interventions to a significantly higher degree than ENs.Conclusions: Individual factors were the most common causes to falls according to the nursing staff. RNs used closeness and dialog as interventions to a significantly higher degree to prevent falls than ENs. Caring of for older people with dementia consisted of a comprehensive on-going assessment by the nursing staff to balance the residents' autonomy-versus-control to minimise fall-risk. This ethical dilemma should initiate development of feasible routines of systematic risk-assessment, report and documentation. © 2011 Struksnes et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.
CITATION STYLE
Struksnes, S., Bachrach-Lindström, M., Hall-Lord, M. L., Slaasletten, R., & Johansson, I. (2011). The nursing staff’s opinion of falls among older persons with dementia. A cross-sectional study. BMC Nursing, 10. https://doi.org/10.1186/1472-6955-10-13
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