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"Instruments"

Original Articles
An electronic medical record-based fall risk assessment tool for pediatric inpatients in South Korea: Improved sensitivity and specificity
Eun Joo Kim, Ji Young Lim, Geun Myun Kim, Junghyun Min
Child Health Nurs Res 2021;27(2):137-145.   Published online April 30, 2021
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4094/chnr.2021.27.2.137
Purpose
To develop a fall risk assessment tool to predict fall risk in pediatric inpatients.
Methods
Three tools widely used in clinical practice (Humpty Dumpty Fall Scale, General Risk Assessment for Pediatric Inpatient Falls, and Seoul National University Hospital Pediatric Fall Risk Scale) were examined, and assessment items were extracted. Employing a case-control design, 29 children who experienced falls during hospital stays were selected as the "fall" group, and a control group (93 children) was selected based on age and sex matching. The sensitivity, specificity, and positive and negative predictive values of the newly developed tool ("Newfs-PI") were analyzed.
Results
The Newfs-PI consisted of seven items: age, activity, history of falls, length of hospital stay, and medication. The total score ranged from 0 to 15. Its sensitivity and specificity were 62.07% and 74.19%, respectively.
Conclusion
The Newfs-PI has high specificity and sensitivity, which are essential for a fall risk assessment tool that complements existing tools. These values are high relative to those of existing assessment tools and satisfy both sensitivity and specificity criteria. As the EMR enables monitoring of the components of the Newfs-PI, the tool can be used as a fall risk assessment and prevention scale for pediatric inpatients.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • Sarcopenia in children: Lecture
    A. N. Zavyalova, V. P. Novikova, M. N. Yakovleva
    Meditsinskiy sovet = Medical Council.2024; (1): 245.     CrossRef
  • Fall prevention in a pediatric unit: a best practice implementation project
    Nydjia Lawrence, Robin Christian, Michelle Palokas, Linda Upchurch
    JBI Evidence Implementation.2024; 22(2): 149.     CrossRef
  • Development of an evidence‐based care bundle protocol for preventing falls in hospitalized children: Delphi study and trial test
    Lixia Chen, Wenjing Liu, Hong Li
    Nursing Open.2023; 10(3): 1715.     CrossRef
  • Escala Humpty Dumpty: adaptação transcultural e validação para cultura brasileira
    Elke Sandra Alves Rodrigues, Daniela Fernanda dos Santos Alves, Ana Márcia Chiaradia Mendes-Castillo, Thaís Moreira São-João, Giselli Cristina Villela Bueno, Deborah Hill-Rodriguez, Renata Cristina Gasparino
    Acta Paulista de Enfermagem.2023;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • The use of pediatric fall risk assessment tool in gastrointestinal endoscopic procedures: A prospective study
    Nadir YALÇIN, Mehmet Akif GÖKTAŞ, Ersin GÜMÜŞ
    Akademik Gastroenteroloji Dergisi.2023; 22(2): 103.     CrossRef
  • The revised Humpty Dumpty Fall Scale: An update to improve tool performance and predictive validity
    Danielle Altares Sarik, Deborah Hill-Rodriguez, Karina A. Gattamorta, Jacqueline L. Gonzalez, Jenny Esteves, Katherine Zamora, Jennifer Cordo
    Journal of Pediatric Nursing.2022; 67: 34.     CrossRef
  • 8,020 View
  • 300 Download
  • 6 Crossref
A Pediatric Fall-Risk Assessment Tool for Hospitalized Children.
Hyeon Ju Shin, Young Nam Kim, Ju Hee Kim, In Sook Son, Kyung Sook Bang
Child Health Nurs Res 2014;20(3):215-224.
DOI: https://doi.org/10.4094/CHNR.2014.20.3.215
PURPOSE
This study was conducted to identify risk factors in hospitalized children, and to develop and validate a fall-risk assessment tool for hospitalized children.
METHODS
A retrospective chart review was performed at one university children's hospital, and an analysis was done of the characteristics of all patients who fell during a 44-month period (n=48). These patients were compared with another 149 hospitalized children who did not fall.
RESULTS
Significant predictors of falls as identified in a multivariate logistic regression analyses were age of less than 3 years old, neurological diagnosis including epilepsy, children's dependency of ADL, physical developmental delay, multiple usage of fall-risk-increasing drugs. The respective odds ratios ranged from 2.4 to 7.1 with 95% confidence interval (p<0.05). Accordingly, defining patients with either 5 risk factors as fall-prone hospitalized children provided a sensitivity of 93.6% and specificity of 16.2%.
CONCLUSION
The results show that this tool has an acceptable level of sensitivity to assess the risk factors of fall in hospitalized children even though the specificity was low, suggesting that this tool may enable nurses to predict the risk level of childhood falls, and develop preventive strategies against pediatric falls in children's units.

Citations

Citations to this article as recorded by  
  • Age-specific differences in patient safety incidents: focus on falls and medication using the Korean patient safety incident reporting and learning system (2016–2023)
    Yumi Son, Mijin Lee
    BMC Health Services Research.2026;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Investigating the association between sociodemographic variables, comorbidities and treatment patterns and the risk of falls in children with ASD
    Musaad Alshammari, Hadeel Alnemari, Sara Alfadhel, Aleksandra Rogowska, Tahani Alshammari
    World Academy of Sciences Journal.2025; 7(5): 1.     CrossRef
  • Incidence of falls and fall-related characteristics in hospitalized children in South Korea: a descriptive study
    Hyeyeong Park, Hyunju Kang
    Child Health Nursing Research.2024; 30(3): 176.     CrossRef
  • Escala Humpty Dumpty: adaptação transcultural e validação para cultura brasileira
    Elke Sandra Alves Rodrigues, Daniela Fernanda dos Santos Alves, Ana Márcia Chiaradia Mendes-Castillo, Thaís Moreira São-João, Giselli Cristina Villela Bueno, Deborah Hill-Rodriguez, Renata Cristina Gasparino
    Acta Paulista de Enfermagem.2023;[Epub]     CrossRef
  • Inpatient Fall Prediction Models: A Scoping Review
    Rex Parsons, Robin D. Blythe, Susanna M. Cramb, Steven M. McPhail
    Gerontology.2023; 69(1): 14.     CrossRef
  • An electronic medical record-based fall risk assessment tool for pediatric inpatients in South Korea: Improved sensitivity and specificity
    Eun Joo Kim, Ji Young Lim, Geun Myun Kim, Junghyun Min
    Child Health Nursing Research.2021; 27(2): 137.     CrossRef
  • Developing a conceptual model of pediatric inpatient safety accidents: A mixed methods approach
    Won‐Oak Oh, EunJoo Kim, YeoJin Im, Jihee Han, Mirim Kim
    Nursing & Health Sciences.2020; 22(3): 777.     CrossRef
  • Meta-analysis of the Diagnostic Test Accuracy of Pediatric Inpatient Fall Risk Assessment Scales
    Eun Joo Kim, Ji Young Lim, Geun Myun Kim, Mi Kyung Lee
    Child Health Nursing Research.2019; 25(1): 56.     CrossRef
  • Development of Educational Content for Nurses to Prevent Safety Accidents of Hospitalized Children: Delphi Approach
    Yun Sil Lee, Won-Oak Oh
    Child Health Nursing Research.2019; 25(1): 74.     CrossRef
  • A risk-factor analysis of medical litigation judgments related to fall injuries in Korea
    Insook Kim, Seonae Won, Mijin Lee, Won Lee
    Medicine, Science and the Law.2018; 58(1): 16.     CrossRef
  • Consultations to Department of Dentistry for Child and Adolescent Inpatients with Dental Trauma
    Chanwoo Jo, Jihun Kim
    THE JOURNAL OF THE KOREAN ACADEMY OF PEDTATRIC DEN.2017; 44(4): 403.     CrossRef
  • The Effect of Pediatric Inpatient Fall Prevention Education on Caregivers' Fall-related Knowledge and Preventive Behaviors
    So Yeon Park, Hyeon Ok Ju
    Journal of Korean Academic Society of Nursing Educ.2017; 23(4): 398.     CrossRef
  • 20,565 View
  • 517 Download
  • 12 Crossref
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