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    Post Falls Management: Mangar Health speak out in Parliamentary Review

    Mangar Health were featured in the Parliamentary Review highlighting best practice in post falls management.

    Mangar Health is working with ambulance trusts, CCGs, health boards and care homes to improve official guidelines around falls and improve post falls management.

    Empowering care homes with the right guidance and equipment to lift fallen residents safely will safeguard lives and save the NHS more than £50 million annually.

    Falls are a common and serious problem for older people. Indeed, people aged 65 and older have the highest risk of falling, with 30 per cent of people older than 65 and 50 per cent of people older than 80 falling at least once a year.

    As the UK population continues to age, falls will remain an everyday challenge for healthcare professionals. People living with conditions such as dementia, MS, Parkinson’s and arthritis have a high propensity to fall, and it is estimated that more than 1,000 people a day living in a care home or assisted-living facility will fall.

    This is why inflatable moving and handling and bathing equipment are necessary – products which Mangar Health provides, and which its CEO, Simon Claridge, discusses further in the following piece.

    Mangar Camel Lifting Cushion

    Mangar Camel Lifting Cushion

    The nature and extent of the problem 

    CQC guidelines currently include comprehensive information regarding falls prevention. However, falls still happen, and reacting to them once they have occurred is the crucial stage, hence the importance of post falls management. Care homes regularly call on the ambulance service to lift their fallen residents, even though more than 45 per cent are uninjured and do not require transportation to hospital.

    Pressurised ambulance trusts, charged with reaching high priority calls within eight minutes, are routinely put in the position of needing to classify uninjured fallen residents in care homes as low priority. This means residents are frequently on the floor for up to four hours or more while waiting for an ambulance to attend. Concern has been growing across ambulance services, CCGs, health boards and care homes, as leaving someone on
    the floor for more than an hour is associated with complications such as hypothermia, pressure ulcers and
    kidney failure.

    Ultimately, remaining on the floor for more than an hour after a fall is associated with high mortality
    rates among people aged over 65. Twenty per cent of patients admitted to hospital as a result of a fall have
    been on the ground for an hour or more, and 50 per cent of these will die within six months.

    In addition, the financial impact of calling an ambulance to uninjured fallen residents is felt in the ambulance service and A & E departments. It is estimated that inappropriate ambulance call-outs to long-term care facilities are currently costing the NHS more than £50 million annually.

    Our role in resolving the issue

    Mangar Health launched the #UpLiftingCare campaign last year after ambulance trusts reported an unprecedented demand on their services to lift uninjured residents living in care homes. Mangar Health manufactures innovative inflatable manual handling equipment which is designed to support carers and healthcare professionals to lift fallen
    people safely.

    The Mangar ELK and Mangar Camel are currently used by every ambulance trust in the UK and are designed to gently lift a person from the floor, while reducing the risk of injury to both the carer and the resident
    who has fallen. Using the appropriate lifting equipment, in conjunction with following advice issued by the
    ambulance service on when to lift a fallen resident, empowers care homes to lift their fallen residents and improve
    falls care.

    West Midlands Ambulance Service created an algorithm called ISTUMBLE, which gives care staff clear instructions
    on what to do before lifting a fallen resident. It provides carers with the confidence to make good decisions
    around lifting. Dr Sue West-Jones, a consultant in emergency medicine, fully endorses ISTUMBLE, saying:

    At Mangar Health we have partnered with CCGs, ambulance services and care homes on a pilot project
    to safeguard fallen residents, while reducing the cost of falls to the NHS. Pilot projects work with care homes
    to combine ISTUMBLE training with the use of lifting equipment, with the objective of improving resident care,
    at the same time reducing ambulance and A & E admission costs. So far, pilot projects in Manchester and south
    Wales have already proven to be incredibly successful.

    Proof of success

    Sophie Wallington, representing North Manchester CCG at the Pennine Acute Hospitals Trust, was one of the first to trial the Camel lifting cushion in care homes in the region.

    Daniel Kelly, manager at Chestnut House Care Home in Manchester, explained:

     

    Another trial in south Wales has seen ambulance call-outs to a Bridgend care home reduce by 55 per cent in just two months. By working in partnership with CCGs, ambulance trusts and care homes, we can deliver a safer and more dignified standard of care for residents living in care homes. Of the over seven million ambulance call-outs across the UK every year, 10 per cent are to fallen people, and around 150,000 of these are to care home residents. Residents are generally reluctant to be admitted to hospital, as admission often results in distress, confusion and anxiety, particularly for anyone living with dementia.

    It is now vital that CQC guidelines are updated to stress how important it is for care homes to use appropriate falls
    policies. Supported by our trade body, the BHTA (British Healthcare Trades Association), we are calling on the CQC
    to include clear direction on a falls policy that safeguards residents and reduces the impact on and cost to NHS services.

    Download our feature here: Parliamentary Review 

     



    1. Griffin says:

      I had a fall in my home I am no light weight so l worry but they bought one of the cushions it was brilliant.I used to work with the elderly this is better than the hoist

    2. Doreen Sullivan says:

      I had a bad fall at home and my husband couldn’t get me up off the floor neither could I get up myself I tried so hard but unable to do it, we had to ring for help when the paramedics came they had one of these lifting chairs it was so quick and no trouble to get me off the floor. I would definitely recommend getting one of these.

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