+AA
Fr
McMasterLogo_New-2017-300x165
Back
Policymaker (health systems) article

Effectiveness of patient-centered interventions on falls in the acute care setting compared to usual care: A systematic review



Findings
  • #ResourceNotFound: OAPLabels, EvidenceSummary#
  • Supporting technical documents that are health systems-relevant
    Not usually available for this document type
  • Scientific Abstract
Recency, quality and context of the findings
  • Last year literature searched
    Not yet available
  • Year Published
    2017
  • Quality Rating
    9/10 (AMSTAR rating from McMaster Health Forum)
  • Countries in which studies (included in the synthesis) were conducted
    Australia (2); Singapore (1); UK (England) (1); USA (1)
  • Global/regional focus
    Not yet available
  • Country focus
    Australia (2); Singapore (1); UK (England) (1); USA (1)
  • Low - and middle-income country (LMIC) focus
s
Additional details about the research
  • Type of document
    Systematic review of effects
  • Type of question
    Effectiveness
  • Focus
    Specific
  • Target
    Individual
    Health system
  • Priority Area
    Not applicable
  • Health system topic(s)
    Delivery arrangements
    With what supports is care provided
    Safety monitoring and improvement systems
    Implementation strategies
    Consumer-targeted strategy
    Information or education provision
    Behaviour change support
    Skills and competencies development
  • Theme
    Optimal aging
  • Domain
    Diseases
    Other
    Accidents
    Sectors
    Hospital care
    Providers
    Nurse
    Allied health professional
Publication details
  • Citation
    Avanecean D, Calliste D, Contreras T, Lim Y, Fitzpatrick A. Effectiveness of patient-centered interventions on falls in the acute care setting compared to usual care: A systematic review. JBI Database of Systematic Reviews and Implementation Reports. 2017;15(12):3006-3048.
  • DOI
    10.11124/JBISRIR-2016-003331

Register for free access to all Professional content

Register
Want the latest in aging research? Sign up for our email alerts.
Subscribe

Support for the Portal is largely provided by the Labarge Optimal Aging Initiative. AGE-WELL is a contributing partner. Help us to continue to provide direct and easy access to evidence-based information on health and social conditions to help you stay healthy, active and engaged as you grow older. Donate Today.

© 2012 - 2020 McMaster University | 1280 Main Street West | Hamilton, Ontario L8S4L8 | +1 905-525-9140 | Terms Of Use