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Movement Patterns of Transient and Prolonged Positioning Events in Nursing Home Residents: Results from the TEAM-UP Trial

  • Kais Gadhoumi
  • , Sharon Eve Sonenblum
  • , Susan M. Kennerly
  • , Jenny Alderden
  • , Phoebe D. Sharkey
  • , Susan D. Horn
  • , Tracey L. Yap
  • Duke University
  • Georgia Institute of Technology
  • East Carolina University
  • Loyola University Maryland
  • University of Utah

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

1 Scopus citations

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To characterize transient and prolonged body position patterns in a large sample of nursing home (NH) residents and describe the variability in movement patterns based on time of occurrence. METHODS: This study is a descriptive, exploratory analysis of up to 28 days of longitudinal accelerometer data for 1, 100 NH residents from the TEAM-UP (Turn Everyone and Move for Ulcer Prevention) clinical trial. Investigators analyzed rates of transient events (TEs; less than 60 seconds) and prolonged events (PEs; 60 seconds or longer) and their interrelationships by nursing shift. RESULTS: Residents' positions changed for at least 1 minute (PEs) nearly three times per hour. Shorter-duration movements (TEs) occurred almost eight times per hour. Residents' PE rates were highest in shift 2 (3 PM to 11 PM), when the median duration and maximum lengths of PEs were lowest; the least active time of day was shift 3 (11 PM to 7 AM). Three-quarters of all PEs lasted less than 15 minutes. The rate of TEs within PEs decreased significantly as the duration of PEs increased. CONCLUSIONS: The NH residents demonstrate complex patterns of movements of both short and prolonged duration while lying and sitting. Findings represent how NH residents naturally move in real-world conditions and provide a new set of metrics to study tissue offloading and its role in pressure injury prevention.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)653-660
Number of pages8
JournalAdvances in Skin and Wound Care
Volume35
Issue number12
DOIs
StatePublished - 1 Dec 2022

Keywords

  • duration
  • movement
  • nursing home
  • pressure injury
  • pressure ulcer
  • repositioning
  • sensor data

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