Background
Today, 1,000 people living in a care home will fall
Research shows that every day 1,000 residents living in care homes in the UK will fall and more than 45% are uninjured and do not require transportation onto hospital. (Cardiff University, 2006).
The NHS Ambulance Trusts are charged with reaching high priority calls within 8 minutes and are often put in the unfortunate position of needing to classify uninjured residents who have had a fall in care homes as low priority. This means residents are regularly left on the floor for up to 4 hours or more.
In North Manchester there has been instances of a 4-6 hour wait before an ambulance has been able to attend an uninjured resident. Leaving a resident on the floor for more than an hour can have implications both physically, socially, physiologically and psychologically. Some of the complications cited associated with lying on a hard service for long periods of time are hyperthermia, pressure sores, kidney failure or renal failure. (ROSPA 2017).
In addition to this, being left on the floor in a communal area has implications on the resident’s dignity, and often can be very distressing for both the resident involved and the other residents around them.
Promoting dignity and safeguarding residents from harm should be a priority for all CCGs and Local Authorities.
Better outcomes and health benefits are ensured when moving a resident who has had a fall within an hour. CCGs and Local Authorities are constantly identifying ways in which ambulance calls out to care homes can be reduced. They will regularly review this as part of their compliance quality and monitoring processes and falls and ambulance calls out are often some of the key areas explored.