Fujita Medical Journal (Nov 2018)

Analysis of accidents during rehabilitation training at an acute-care hospital

  • Akiko Maeda,
  • Toshio Teranishi,
  • Shin-ichi Sato,
  • Mihoko Itoh,
  • Nozomi Hokimoto,
  • Kenta Fujimura,
  • Hirofumi Ota,
  • Eiichi Saitoh

DOI
https://doi.org/10.20407/fmj.4.4_97
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4, no. 4
pp. 97 – 102

Abstract

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Objective: Accidents that occurred during rehabilitation training were retrospectively analyzed to understand the risks involved in rehabilitation training. Methods: Subjects were 33,905 patients who underwent rehabilitation training at an acute-care hospital over an 8-year period. In total, 457 accidents occurred during rehabilitation training and were analyzed. Data collected were: accident incidence rate, patient’s position/behavior at the time of the accident, state of assistance/supervision by the therapist in charge, and annual number of accidents per therapist by years of experience. Results: Most accidents that occurred during rehabilitation training involved bleeding, falls, and route-related accidents (accidents related to use of catheters, intravenous lines, or nasogastric tubes), in that order. Half of the accidents occurred in a training room. Bleeding was associated with a variety of behaviors, including lying, sitting, and walking, and 40% of falls occurred while walking. Examination of the number of accidents per therapist by years of experience showed patients tended to experience accidents when being assisted/supervised by therapists with 1–4 years of experience. Conclusions: Many accidents that occurred during rehabilitation training at this acute-care hospital involved bleeding or falls. Accidents were more common when a therapist with only a few years of experience was conducting the training.

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