Development and Delphi consensus validation of the Medication-Related Fall Screening and Scoring tool.

Author:

Saeed Dima1ORCID,Carter Gillian2,Miller Ruth3,Darcy Carmel3,Miller Karen3,Madden Kevin3,McKee Hilary3,Agnew Jayne3,Crawford Paula3,Parsons Carole4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Middle East University

2. Queen's University Belfast School of Nursing and Midwifery

3. Health and Social Care Northern Ireland

4. Queen's University Belfast

Abstract

Abstract Introduction: Falls are a significant public health problem and constitute a major cause of injuries and mortality. Risk factors for falls are multifactorial and include medication use. Aim To develop a medication-related fall (MRF) screening and scoring tool and to determine its content validity. Methods The MRF tool was developed from clinical practice guidelines addressing medication-related problems and additional medications identified by specialist pharmacists across a region of the United Kingdom (Northern Ireland (NI)). Medication classes were categorised according to their ‘potential to cause falls’ as: high-risk (three points), moderate-risk (two points) or low-risk (one point). The overall medication-related falls risk for the patient was determined by summing the scores for all medications. The MRF was validated using Delphi consensus methodology, whereby three iterative rounds of surveys were conducted using SurveyMonkey®. Twenty-two experts from 10 countries determined their agreement with the falls risk associated with each medication on a 5-point Likert scale. Only medications with at least 75% of respondents agreeing or strongly agreeing were retained in the next round. Results Consensus was reached for 19 medications/medication classes to be included in the final version of the MRF tool; ten were classified as high-risk, eight as moderate-risk and one as low-risk. Conclusion The MRF tool is simple and has the potential to be integrated into medicines optimisation to reduce falls risk and negative fall-related outcomes. The score from the MRF tool can be used to as a clinical parameter to assess the need for medication review and clinical interventions.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference74 articles.

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3. Falls in older people: epidemiology, risk factors and strategies for prevention;Rubenstein LZ;Age Ageing,2006

4. Modification of potentially inappropriate prescribing following fall-related hospitalizations in older adults;Walsh ME;Drugs Aging,2019

5. Pharmacotherapy as major risk factor of falls - analysis of 12 months experience in hospitals in South Bohemia;Maly J;J Appl Biomed,2019

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