BackgroundHospitalized patients in the United States experience falls at a rate of 2.6 to 17.1 per 1000 patient-days, with the majority occurring when a patient is moving to, from, and around the bed. Each fall with injury costs an average of US $14,000.ObjectiveThe aim was to conduct a technology evaluation, including feasibility, usability, and user experience, of a medical sensor-based Intranet of things (IoT) system in facilitating nursing response to bed exits in an acute care hospital.MethodsPatients 18 years and older with a Morse fall score of 45 or greater were recruited from a 35-bed medical-surgical ward in a 317-bed Massachusetts teaching hospital. Eligible patients were recruited between August 4, 2015 and July 31, 2016. Participants received a sensor pad placed between the top of their mattress and bed sheet. The sensor pad was positioned to monitor movement from patients’ shoulders to their thighs. The SensableCare System was evaluated for monitoring patient movement and delivering timely alerts to nursing staff via mobile devices when there appeared to be a bed-exit attempt. Sensor pad data were collected automatically from the system. The primary outcomes included number of falls, time to turn off bed-exit alerts, and the number of attempted bed-exit events. Data on patient falls were collected by clinical research assistants and confirmed with the unit nurse manager. Explanatory variables included room locations (zones 1-3), day of the week, nursing shift, and Morse Fall Scale (ie, positive fall history, positive secondary diagnosis, positive ambulatory aid, weak impaired gait/transfer, positive IV/saline lock, mentally forgets limitations). We also assessed user experience via nurse focus groups. Qualitative data regarding staff interactions with the system were collected during two focus groups with 25 total nurses, each lasting approximately 1.5 hours.ResultsA total of 91 patients used the system for 234.0 patient-days and experienced no bed falls during the study period. On average, patients were assisted/returned to bed 46 seconds after the alert system was triggered. Response times were longer during the overnight nursing shift versus day shift (P=.005), but were independent of the patient’s location on the unit. Focus groups revealed that nurses found the system integrated well into the clinical nursing workflow and the alerts were helpful in patient monitoring.ConclusionsA medical IoT system can be integrated into the existing nursing workflow and may reduce patient bed fall risk in acute care hospitals, a high priority but an elusive patient safety challenge. By using an alerting system that sends notifications directly to nurses’ mobile devices, nurses can equally respond to unassisted bed-exit attempts wherever patients are located on the ward. Further study, including a fully powered randomized controlled trial, is needed to assess effectiveness across hospital settings.
Background To describe the types of research being conducted and the availability of research ethics training and research ethics review in Thailand and Vietnam. Methods An English survey with four major domains, Research Area, Societal Conditions, Research Ethics, and Basic Information was translated into Thai and Vietnamese by native training partners from the NIH Fogarty Research Ethics Training Program. Setting/Participants The survey was administered in two modes - an online survey distributed via an email link in Thailand, and an onsite paper survey in Vietnam. Participants were Thai and Vietnamese trainees and investigators from prestigious universities. Results In Thailand, there were 363 respondents (9.3% online response rate); in Vietnam there were 117 survey participants. Among those who conduct research, 81% in Thailand and 92% percent in Vietnam reported that their research involves human subjects. Among human subject researchers, 83% in Thailand reported having ethics training, and among these, only 44% reported having formal training. In Vietnam, 66% reported having research ethics training; among them, 72% had formal training. Human subject research reported include clinical observations (26% from Thailand and 26% from Vietnam) and clinical interventions (29% from Thailand and 26% from Vietnam). Significant proportion of respondents reported that their institutions have guidelines (97% in Thailand; 89% from Vietnam) and have established Institutional Review Boards (92% in Thailand; 77% in Vietnam). 76% and 79% of respondents in Thailand and Vietnam respectively reported no experience in teaching research ethics. Lack of trained research ethics teachers (38% in Thailand and 59% in Vietnam), training materials (34% in Thailand; 43% in Vietnam), and an adequate curricular “delivery platform” (58% in Thailand; 49% in Vietnam) are most pressing issues. Conclusions We identified gaps in research ethics training in these two South East Asian countries undergoing rapid socioeconomic transition and identified future curricular focus opportunities.
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