Children's falls inside the inpatient setting: A qualitative study of parent perceptions and the implications for falls prevention messaging.

J Pediatr Nurs

Children's Hospital of Philadelphia, Center for Nursing Research and Evidence-based Practice, 3401 Civic Center Blvd, Philadelphia, PA 19104, United States of America; Rutgers University School of Nursing, 110 Paterson St, New Brunswick, NJ 08901, United States of America.

Published: December 2022

Purpose: To explore how parents understand their children's falls during hospitalization and how they perceive hospital interventions and messaging related to fall risk and prevention.

Design And Methods: Semi-structured interviews were conducted to explore parent-caregiver descriptions of their children's falls during hospitalization. Prospective purposive sampling was used to identify eligible participants. Interviews were conducted with the parent-caregiver who was present at the time of the fall event. Themes were coded both inductively and deductively using a constant comparative method.

Results: Twelve parent-child groupings participated. Three themes emerged: parental knowledge of risk, parent sense of threat to the identity of the child, and age differences in perception of level of controllability of risk.

Conclusions: Falls prevention education is usually delivered as a straightforward presentation of generic factual information about risk factors, with the assumption that families need more information. Findings from this study challenge this approach. This study indicates that parent-caregivers have fairly high levels of knowledge about children's fall risks; parent-caregiver beliefs about the controllability of falls may differ based on age of the child; finally, as has been found in previous studies of adult falls, parent-caregivers may perceive hospital falls prevention measures as a source of potential threat to their child''s already vulnerable social identity.

Practice Implications: Involving the parent-caregiver in the fall risk assessment and collaborative development of falls prevention interventions may increase family alliance with health advice and reduce the incidence of falls in hospitalized children.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pedn.2022.08.005DOI Listing

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