Heliyon (Jul 2024)

Meteorological parameters and hospital-acquired falls—A multicenter retrospective study based on 10 years of adverse events reporting system data

  • Yuanyuan Ren,
  • Jinyan Li,
  • Jun Yang,
  • Lei Hu,
  • Zhihui Xu,
  • Rongjuan Fu,
  • Kaihui Wu,
  • Min Guo,
  • Mei Hu,
  • Liu Ran,
  • Xia Li,
  • Huicheng Qiu,
  • Lianmei Liao,
  • Mengmeng Zhang,
  • Yetao Luo,
  • Sumei Zhou,
  • Fu Ding

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 13
p. e34193

Abstract

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Objective and rationale: Hospital-acquired falls are common and serious adverse events in medical institutions, with high incidence and injury rates. Studying the occurrence patterns of hospital-acquired falls is important for preventing falls in hospitalized patients. However, the effect of meteorological factors on hospital-acquired falls has not been elucidated. Therefore, this study explored the impact of meteorological parameters on hospital-acquired falls in Chongqing, China, and provided new ideas for the clinical prevention of falls in patients. Methods: Correlation analysis and distributed lag nonlinear models were employed to analyze the relationship between 3890 cases of hospital-acquired falls and meteorological data in 13 hospitals in 11 districts and counties in Chongqing from January 2013 to April 2023. Results: The number of hospital-acquired falls demonstrated a nonlinear correlation with the daily average relative humidity and negatively correlated with sunshine duration; however, temperature, air pressure, and wind speed were not correlated. Compared to the reference humidity (87 %), the immediate effects of daily average relative humidity (65–68 % and 90–97 %) increased the risk of hospital-acquired falls on the same day (relative risk [RR]:1.027–1.243). When the daily average relative humidity was 95–97 %, lags of 0–1 d and 8–12 d had greater effects on falls (RR:1.073–1.243). The daily average relative humidities of 62–74 % and 91–97 % were statistically significant at cumulative relative risk (CRR)of 4, 7, 10, and 14 d with a cumulative lag (CRR: 1.111–4.277). On sex and age stratification, the lag and cumulative effects of relative humidity more significantly impacted falls in women and patients aged ≥65 years. Conclusion: Daily average relative humidity had a nonlinear correlation and lag effect on hospital-acquired falls; therefore, medical institutions should pay attention to the effect of relative humidity on hospital-acquired falls in patients, especially old and female patients.

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