Keywords

duration, movement, nursing home, pressure injury, pressure ulcer, repositioning, sensor data

 

Authors

  1. Gadhoumi, Kais PhD
  2. Sonenblum, Sharon Eve PhD
  3. Kennerly, Susan M. PhD, RN, CNE, WCC, FAAN
  4. Alderden, Jenny PhD, APRN
  5. Sharkey, Phoebe D. PhD
  6. Horn, Susan D. PhD
  7. Yap, Tracey L. PhD, RN, WCC, CNE, FGSA, FAAN

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: To characterize transient and prolonged body position patterns in a large sample of nursing home (NH) residents and describe the variability in movement patterns based on time of occurrence.

 

METHODS: This study is a descriptive, exploratory analysis of up to 28 days of longitudinal accelerometer data for 1,100 NH residents from the TEAM-UP (Turn Everyone and Move for Ulcer Prevention) clinical trial. Investigators analyzed rates of transient events (TEs; less than 60 seconds) and prolonged events (PEs; 60 seconds or longer) and their interrelationships by nursing shift.

 

RESULTS: Residents' positions changed for at least 1 minute (PEs) nearly three times per hour. Shorter-duration movements (TEs) occurred almost eight times per hour. Residents' PE rates were highest in shift 2 (3 PM to 11 PM), when the median duration and maximum lengths of PEs were lowest; the least active time of day was shift 3 (11 PM to 7 AM). Three-quarters of all PEs lasted less than 15 minutes. The rate of TEs within PEs decreased significantly as the duration of PEs increased.

 

CONCLUSIONS: The NH residents demonstrate complex patterns of movements of both short and prolonged duration while lying and sitting. Findings represent how NH residents naturally move in real-world conditions and provide a new set of metrics to study tissue offloading and its role in pressure injury prevention.