MedPath

Flooring for Injury Prevention Trial

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Bone Fracture
Head Injuries, Closed
Traumatic Brain Injury
Accidental Falls
Nursing Homes
Interventions
Other: SmartCell flooring
Other: Plywood flooring
Registration Number
NCT01618786
Lead Sponsor
Dr. Stephen Robinovitch
Brief Summary

This study will evaluate the efficacy of novel compliant flooring in reducing injuries due to falls in a long-term care facility, determine the cost effectiveness of this intervention, and assess perceptions about compliant flooring among staff, residents, and families.

The investigators hypothesize that compliant flooring will (1) reduce the incidence of injuries due to falls in long-term care residents; (2) represent an overall cost-savings when material and implementation costs are considered relative to direct and indirect costs associated with injuries due to falls; and (3) be received positively by staff, residents, and their family members.

Detailed Description

Falls are the number one cause of unintentional injury among older adults in Canada, and are responsible for economic costs in excess of $1 billion CAD annually. In high-risk environments, such as long-term care (LTC) facilities, 60% of residents will experience at least one fall each year. Moreover, approximately 30% of falls in LTC residents result in injury, and 3 to 5% cause fractures.

A promising strategy for reducing the incidence of fall-related injuries in LTC facilities is to decrease the stiffness of the ground surface, and the subsequent force applied to the body parts at impact. Purpose-designed compliant flooring can reduce the force applied to the hip during a fall by up to 35 % (to allow a raw egg to be successfully bounced without cracking). Yet, few LTC facilities have flooring designed to reduce the impact of falls. This study will address this gap.

Resident rooms at a local LTC facility will be randomly assigned to installation of compliant flooring or control (non-compliant) flooring. Following installation, primary and secondary outcomes, including fall-related injuries and falls, will be monitored for 4 years and compared between resident rooms with and without compliant flooring. In addition, health resource utilization and their costs will be compared between resident rooms with and without compliant flooring. Perceptions about compliant flooring will be assessed among staff, residents, and their families.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
151
Inclusion Criteria

Not provided

Exclusion Criteria

Not provided

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
PARALLEL
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
Compliant Flooring (CF)SmartCell flooringCompliant flooring
Control (CON)Plywood flooringNon-compliant flooring
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Fall-related injuries4 years

Moderate and serious injuries that result from falls in resident rooms. Assessed from incident and follow-up reports at participating long-term care facility.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Health resource utilization4 years

Hospital transfers and admissions, emergency room visits, length of hospital stay, physician visits, physiotherapy and occupational therapy visits, nursing visits, diagnostic and lab procedures.

Musculoskeletal injuries4 years

Work-related musculoskeletal injuries experienced by staff at participating long-term care facility.

Falls4 years

Falls in resident rooms. Assessed from incident reports at participating long-term care facility.

Fractures4 years

Fractures in resident rooms. Assessed from incident and follow-up reports at participating long-term care facility.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

New Vista Care Home

🇨🇦

Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada

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