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Development of the Home Fall Hazard Checklist
Author(s) -
Christina Ziebart,
Neha Dewan,
Joshua R. Tuazon,
Joy C. MacDermid
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
rehabilitation research and practice
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.239
H-Index - 9
eISSN - 2090-2875
pISSN - 2090-2867
DOI - 10.1155/2021/5362197
Subject(s) - medicine , checklist , hazard , cognitive psychology , chemistry , psychology , organic chemistry
Objective Home hazard assessment is particularly important following a fracture as a means of preventing subsequent fractures. The purpose of this study was to evaluate current checklists and evidence on home hazard to develop a usable self-administered checklist that could be used by adults to assess home hazards.Design Review and observational, prospective study. Setting . Community dwelling. Participants . Nine adults (4 men, 5 women) were asked to review the checklist and provide feedback on whether items were relevant, comprehensive, and easy to understand. Intervention . A search for literature examining the causes of falls that focused on home hazards or behaviours was conducted, and causes were extracted. Using the combined list of home hazards, a draft checklist was created. The participants were asked to pilot the checklist through their home. Primary and Secondary Outcome . An initial iteration of the checklist was modified to reduce redundancy (by grouping certain items together), improve usability (by adding a “not applicable category”), and improve readability (by removing double-barrelled questions or rewriting certain items).Results This process resulted in 74 items in 10 areas. On average, it took 10 minutes for the participants to complete the home walk-through while filling out the checklist.Conclusion The fall hazard-home checklist is a new checklist designed to identify home fall hazards with the intended use of being either administered by self-report through memory or supported by a walk-about, and that could potentially be completed by a patient who has incurred a fall, fracture, a family member, or caregiver. Given the expense of home hazard assessments that involve a home visit, the validity of this method of detection warrants further investigation.

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