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Adverse risk: a ‘dynamic interaction model of patient moving and handling’

Howard Griffiths, Thomas Griffiths

Journal of Nursing Management, Volume: 20, Issue: 6, Pages: 713 - 736

Swansea University Author: Thomas Griffiths

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Abstract

Aim  The aim of the paper was to examine patient adverse events associated with sub‐optimal patient moving and handling.Background  There are not many studies which have examined the patient’s perspective on adverse risk during manual handling episodes.Evaluation  A narrative review was undertaken l...

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Published in: Journal of Nursing Management
ISSN: 09660429
Published: Blackwell Science Ltd 2012
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URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa38188
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first_indexed 2018-01-21T20:17:19Z
last_indexed 2018-02-09T05:32:26Z
id cronfa38188
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spelling v2 38188 2018-01-21 Adverse risk: a ‘dynamic interaction model of patient moving and handling’ 5f4207f2cf7a402302966f61d32423b7 Thomas Griffiths Thomas Griffiths true false 2018-01-21 HNU Aim  The aim of the paper was to examine patient adverse events associated with sub‐optimal patient moving and handling.Background  There are not many studies which have examined the patient’s perspective on adverse risk during manual handling episodes.Evaluation  A narrative review was undertaken leading to ‘Dynamic Interaction Model of Patient Moving and Handling’ from peer‐reviewed publications published in English between 1992 and 2010.Key issues  Five themes emerged from the narrative review: ‘patient’s require information about analgesics prior to movement/ambulation’; ‘comfort care’; ‘patient's mastery of and acceptance of using mobility aids and equipment’; 'adjustment to fear of falling'; and ‘requirement to move to prevent tissue pressure damage’.Conclusion:  Quality care indicators such as prevalence of patient discomfort, pain, falls, pressure sores in addition of use of direct observation instrument to observe patient handling such as Direct Instrument Nursing Observation (DINO) tool can be used by back care adviser. Implications for Nursing Management:  Nurse managers need to consider quality of care for their service users. ‘Dynamic Interaction Model of Nurse‐Patient Moving and Handling’ provides back care advisers, clinical risk managers and occupational health managers with an alternative perspective to clinical risk. Journal Article Journal of Nursing Management 20 6 713 736 Blackwell Science Ltd 09660429 Dynamic Interaction Model of Patient Moving and Handling; narrative literature review; patient adverse events; patient manual handling; work technique. 30 9 2012 2012-09-30 10.1111%2Fj.1365-2834.2011.01276.x COLLEGE NANME Nursing COLLEGE CODE HNU Swansea University 2023-06-26T16:35:20.2404198 2018-01-21T14:23:47.1340787 Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences School of Health and Social Care - Nursing Howard Griffiths 1 Thomas Griffiths 2
title Adverse risk: a ‘dynamic interaction model of patient moving and handling’
spellingShingle Adverse risk: a ‘dynamic interaction model of patient moving and handling’
Thomas Griffiths
title_short Adverse risk: a ‘dynamic interaction model of patient moving and handling’
title_full Adverse risk: a ‘dynamic interaction model of patient moving and handling’
title_fullStr Adverse risk: a ‘dynamic interaction model of patient moving and handling’
title_full_unstemmed Adverse risk: a ‘dynamic interaction model of patient moving and handling’
title_sort Adverse risk: a ‘dynamic interaction model of patient moving and handling’
author_id_str_mv 5f4207f2cf7a402302966f61d32423b7
author_id_fullname_str_mv 5f4207f2cf7a402302966f61d32423b7_***_Thomas Griffiths
author Thomas Griffiths
author2 Howard Griffiths
Thomas Griffiths
format Journal article
container_title Journal of Nursing Management
container_volume 20
container_issue 6
container_start_page 713
publishDate 2012
institution Swansea University
issn 09660429
doi_str_mv 10.1111%2Fj.1365-2834.2011.01276.x
publisher Blackwell Science Ltd
college_str Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
hierarchytype
hierarchy_top_id facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences
hierarchy_top_title Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
hierarchy_parent_id facultyofmedicinehealthandlifesciences
hierarchy_parent_title Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences
department_str School of Health and Social Care - Nursing{{{_:::_}}}Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences{{{_:::_}}}School of Health and Social Care - Nursing
document_store_str 0
active_str 0
description Aim  The aim of the paper was to examine patient adverse events associated with sub‐optimal patient moving and handling.Background  There are not many studies which have examined the patient’s perspective on adverse risk during manual handling episodes.Evaluation  A narrative review was undertaken leading to ‘Dynamic Interaction Model of Patient Moving and Handling’ from peer‐reviewed publications published in English between 1992 and 2010.Key issues  Five themes emerged from the narrative review: ‘patient’s require information about analgesics prior to movement/ambulation’; ‘comfort care’; ‘patient's mastery of and acceptance of using mobility aids and equipment’; 'adjustment to fear of falling'; and ‘requirement to move to prevent tissue pressure damage’.Conclusion:  Quality care indicators such as prevalence of patient discomfort, pain, falls, pressure sores in addition of use of direct observation instrument to observe patient handling such as Direct Instrument Nursing Observation (DINO) tool can be used by back care adviser. Implications for Nursing Management:  Nurse managers need to consider quality of care for their service users. ‘Dynamic Interaction Model of Nurse‐Patient Moving and Handling’ provides back care advisers, clinical risk managers and occupational health managers with an alternative perspective to clinical risk.
published_date 2012-09-30T16:35:15Z
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