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Resident Lifting System

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1 Resident Lifting System
St. Joseph's General Hospital Comox, British Columbia, Canada Presenter: Sandy Woiden, R.N., B.Sc.N. Vice President, Residential Services Prepared for: Northwest Center for Occupational Health & Safety Occupational Hazards to Health Care Workers Conference July 31 – August 1, 2002

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5 WCB Injury Rates in Healthcare
More days lost per claim, and higher injury rate than the provincial average for all B.C. industries combined Strain injuries account for 71% of serious claims Overexertion accidents (pushing, pulling, lifting & carrying) account for 54% of serious claims Primary care givers incur 60% of serious injuries Y2K base injury rates ↑ 193% over 1999

6 Hospital Union Surveys its Members
77% felt ↑ workload over past few years 55% felt mentally or physically stressed 46% had ongoing or chronic pain while working 49% used sick time to recover from muscle strain or injury at work, other forms of pain, or from stress in the workplace.

7 credit WCB - financial support Sid Fattedad
HEABC employer support Gary Moser, Mike Arbogast OHSAH- evaluation Annalee Yassi Lisa Ronald Robert Tate Michelle Mozel Jacqueline Sewel Jerry Spiegel OH&S Committee-St. Joseph’s Resident Lifting Steering Committee- St. Joseph’s Maggie Little - Trillium Lodge

8 Scope Initial: 125 bed Extended Care Unit - resident rooms
- bathing facilities Subsequent: Acute - Diagnostic Imaging - Intensive Care Unit - All OR’s - Selective wards, acute care - Morgue

9 Perspective Qualitative
‘Evaluation of the Resident Lifting System Project, St.Joseph’s Hospital, Comox ‘ prepared Dec OHSAH Experiential

10 Background Equipment Ceiling lift Floor lifts Slings Policy
Lift vs.Transfer “No lift” policy Lift Designation

11 Improved Work Environment

12 Space constrained

13 Space unrestrained

14 Storage

15 High Risk Work Practices Eliminated
Unsafe Transfers -due to compromising factors: -resident -staff -equipment Unsafe Lifts ie: lift off the floor, moving up in chair or bed

16 Chicken lift

17 Mismatched Surface Heights

18 6 person lift eliminated

19 Ceiling lift to stretcher

20 Repositioning in chair

21 Turning a resident in bed

22 Weighing residents

23 Employee accommodation

24 Quality of Daily Life Residents are able to:
-plan their own day -be spontaneous -be more independent -make use of a wider variety of equipment

25 Complex seating

26 Variable chair heights

27 Family response

28 Reduction in resident anxiety

29 Resident operating lift on their own

30 Retirement of the bed pan

31 Appreciative Resident

32 Emergency Lowering Simple Maintenance Resident Comfort
Features Emergency Lowering Simple Maintenance Resident Comfort

33 Power failure release

34 Simplicity of maintenance

35 Resident Comfort Floor Lifts have disadvantages that are eliminated with an Overhead Lifting System

36 Floor lift spreader bar

37 Bumping legs

38 Privacy adaptation for ceiling track gantry

39 Other Applications Intensive Care Unit Diagnostic Imaging
Operating Rooms Acute Care Morgue

40 ICU repositioning of patients

41 Options to fixed power units

42 Application in outpatients and radiology

43 OR-urology

44 OR orthopedics

45 Residents Employees Financial Reversal of MSI spiral
Benefits Residents Employees Financial Reversal of MSI spiral

46 Effectiveness of Installing Overhead Ceiling Lifts (AAOHN Journal 2002; 50(3), 120-127)
Summary: Installation of ceiling lifts in combination with an appropriate training program is effective in reducing the number of musculoskeletal injures (MSI) from lifting and transferring patients in an extended care unit.

47 It is important to divide injury types into tasks being performed at the time of the injury to evaluate the effectiveness of specific types of patient handling equipment. Assessing subjective views of both staff and patients is essential to an effective evaluation.

48 Implementing a Resident Lifting System in an Extended Care Hospital (AAOHN Journal 2002; 50(3), ) Summary: 1. Implementing mechanical resident lifting equipment in an extended care facility produced payback from direct savings alone within 4 years. Payback occurred more quickly when the effect of indirect savings or the trend to rising compensation costs was considered.

49 2. Combining the observations of the occupational health nurses related to staff well being with relevant cost-benefit data is useful in influencing decision-makers and in securing funding for prevention measures. 3. Clear identification of a viewpoint is an important part of an economic evaluation and cost-benefit analysis.

50 Thank you for inviting me!!
Come and visit our beautiful Comox Valley on Vancouver Island Skiing Fishing Golf

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