AI Article Synopsis

  • Nurses perform multiple mobility risk assessments in hospitals, and using a single tool could enhance efficiency and accuracy in clinical documentation.
  • The study evaluated how well AM-PAC mobility scores could predict mobility components of various risk assessment tools for falls and pressure injuries.
  • Results showed high accuracy (≥85%) for most tools, except for the Morse Fall Scale (40%), indicating the potential for a unified mobility assessment approach.

Article Abstract

Background: Nurses routinely perform multiple risk assessments related to patient mobility in the hospital. Use of a single mobility assessment for multiple risk assessment tools could improve clinical documentation efficiency, accuracy and lay the groundwork for automated risk evaluation tools.

Purpose: We tested how accurately Activity Measure for Post-Acute Care (AM-PAC) mobility scores predicted the mobility components of various fall and pressure injury risk assessment tools.

Method: AM-PAC scores along with mobility and physical activity components on risk assessments (Braden Scale, Get Up and Go used within the Hendrich II Fall Risk Model®, Johns Hopkins Fall Risk Assessment Tool (JHFRAT) and Morse Fall Scale) were collected on a cohort of hospitalised patients. We predicted scores of risk assessments based on AM-PAC scores by fitting of ordinal logistic regressions between AM-PAC scores and risk assessments. STROBE checklist was used to report the present study.

Findings: AM-PAC scores predicted the observed mobility components of Braden, Get Up and Go and JHFRAT with high accuracy (≥85%), but with lower accuracy for the Morse Fall Scale (40%).

Discussion: These findings suggest that a single mobility assessment has the potential to be a good solution for the mobility components of several fall and pressure injury risk assessments.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jocn.17098DOI Listing

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