Safe Patient Handling - Preventing Patient Falls and Nursing Injuries
Contact Hours: 2
Cost: $20.00
Nursing is a high-risk occupation with respect to patient (*) lifting and handling-related injuries. It is the profession most associated with work-related musculoskeletal disorders (MSD) and injuries. Nearly 12 out of 100 nurses (+) in hospitals and 18 out of 100 nurses working in nursing homes report work-related MSD injuries. Concurrently, frail older patients are at significant risk of suffering injurious falls during staff transfers from bed to wheelchair, toilet, chair, walker, or standing and back to bed. Despite awareness that manual patient handling is a high-hazard task and the promotion of training programs aimed at teaching nurses proper body mechanics, the incidence of MSD injuries persists at high rates, as does the incidence of ‘dropped’ patients during staff lifts/transfers. The purpose of this course is to increase awareness of nursing and patient factors contributing to unsafe handling tasks and the use of mechanical equipment to support safe handling tasks. As well, guidance on achieving an effective safe patient handling (SPH) program is discussed.
(*) The term ‘patient’ refers to both individuals in acute care and long-term care facilities.
(+) All references made to ‘nursing, nurses or nurse’ also includes certified nursing assistants.
Objectives
Upon completion of this course, participants will be able to:
- Nursing and patient factors contributing to unsafe handling tasks.
- Extent and type of injuries related to patient handling activities.
- Myths associated with safe patient handling (SPH).
- Clinical steps in determining SPH needs.
- Patient fall/and mobility risk factors and assessment/intervention associated with SPH activities.
- Organization components of a SPH program.
- Key components of a successful SPH program.
- Key components of a successful SPH program.
- Care of bariatric patients related to SPH activities.
- Benefits of SPH programs.
Curriculum
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: SPH - Assessing Handling Risks
Chapter 3: SPH - Assessing Mobility and Fall Risk
Chapter 4: SPH - Care Planning
Chapter 5: SPH and Bariatric Care
Chapter 6: Organizing a SPH Program
Chapter 7: Key Components of a Successful SPH Program
Chapter 8: Case Study
Chapter 9: Conclusion
- References
- Appendix: SPH Beliefs vs. Facts