Activeforever Invacare Semi-Electric Home Care Hospital Bed User Manual

Page 37

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APPENDIX

37

The FDA’s Brochure

Potential risks of bed rails may include:
• Strangling, suffocating, bodily injury or death when patients or part of their body are

caught between rails or between the bed rails and mattress.

• More serious injuries from falls when patients climb over rails.
• Skin bruising, cuts, and scrapes.
• Inducing agitated behavior when bed rails are used as a restraint.
• Feeling isolated or unnecessarily restricted.
• Preventing patients, who are able to get out of bed, from performing routine activities

such as going to the bathroom or retrieving something from a closet.

Meeting Patients' Needs for Safety

Most patients can be in bed safely without bed rails. Consider the following:
• Use beds that can be raised and lowered close to the floor to accommodate both

patient and health care worker needs.

• Keep the bed in the lowest position with wheels locked.
• When the patient is at risk of falling out of bed, place mats next to the bed, as long as

this does not create a greater risk of accident.

• Use transfer or mobility aids.
• Monitor patients frequently.
• Anticipate the reasons patients get out of bed such as hunger, thirst, going to the

bathroom, restlessness and pain; meet these needs by offering food and fluids,
scheduling ample toiletting, and providing calming interventions and pain relief.

When bed rails are used, perform an on-going assessment of the patient’s physical and
mental status; closely monitor high-risk patients. Consider the following:
• Lower one or more sections of the bed rail, such as the foot rail.
• Use a proper size mattress or mattress with raised foam edges to prevent patients from

being trapped between the mattress and rail.

• Reduce the gaps between the mattress and side rails.

Which Ways of Reducing Risks are Best?

A process that requires ongoing patient evaluation and monitoring will result in
optimizing bed safety. Many patients go through a period of adjustment to become
comfortable with new options. Patients and their families should talk to their health care
planning team to find out which options are best for them.

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