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Policymaker (health systems) article
Effectiveness of patient-centered interventions on falls in the acute care setting compared to usual care: A systematic review
Findings
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Evidence Summary
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Supporting technical documents that are health systems-relevantNot usually available for this document type
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Scientific Abstract
Recency, quality and context of the findings
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Last year literature searchedNot yet available
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Year Published2017
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Quality Rating9/10 (AMSTAR rating from McMaster Health Forum)
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Countries in which studies (included in the synthesis) were conductedAustralia (2); Singapore (1); UK (England) (1); USA (1)
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Global/regional focusNot yet available
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Country focusAustralia (2); Singapore (1); UK (England) (1); USA (1)
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Low - and middle-income country (LMIC) focus
Additional details about the research
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Type of documentSystematic review of effects
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Type of questionEffectiveness
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FocusSpecific
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TargetIndividual
Health system
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Priority AreaNot applicable
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Health system topic(s)Delivery arrangementsWith what supports is care providedSafety monitoring and improvement systemsImplementation strategiesConsumer-targeted strategyInformation or education provisionBehaviour change supportSkills and competencies development
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ThemeOptimal aging
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DomainDiseasesOtherAccidentsSectorsHospital careProvidersNurseAllied health professional
Publication details
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CitationAvanecean D, Calliste D, Contreras T, Lim Y, Fitzpatrick A. Effectiveness of patient-centered interventions on falls in the acute care setting compared to usual care: A systematic review. JBI Database of Systematic Reviews and Implementation Reports. 2017;15(12):3006-3048.
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DOI10.11124/JBISRIR-2016-003331


