Bed and toilet height as potential environmental risk factors

scientific article published in February 2008

Bed and toilet height as potential environmental risk factors is …
instance of (P31):
scholarly articleQ13442814

External links are
P356DOI10.1177/1054773807311408
P698PubMed publication ID18184978
P5875ResearchGate publication ID5665718

P50authorElizabeth CapezutiQ41727137
Marie BoltzQ89279425
P2093author name stringMichelle Secic
Barbara L Brush
Laura Wagner
Susan Renz
P2860cites workThe Mini-Mental State Examination: A Comprehensive ReviewQ22242356
“Mini-mental state”Q25938989
Revolutionary advances in adaptive seating systems for the elderly and persons with disabilities that assist sit-to-stand transfersQ30310971
Side rail use and bed-related fall outcomes among nursing home residents.Q34655524
Consequences of an intervention to reduce restrictive side rail use in nursing homes.Q36753026
Task-specific resistance training to improve the ability of activities of daily living-impaired older adults to rise from a bed and from a chairQ40654017
Chair and bed rise performance in ADL-impaired congregate housing residentsQ40765154
Physical restraint use and falls in nursing home residents.Q40993996
Motion analysis measurements of body movements during standing: association with age and sex.Q42688923
Injurious falls in nonambulatory nursing home residents: a comparative study of circumstances, incidence, and risk factorsQ43538928
Implications of an adjustable bed height during standard nursing tasks on spinal motion, perceived exertion and muscular activityQ47225338
When older adults face the chair-rise challenge. A study of chair height availability and height-modified chair-rise performance in the elderlyQ47400941
Association between subject functional status, seat height, and movement strategy in sit-to-stand performance.Q47405854
Chair design affects how older adults rise from a chairQ48519108
Development and evaluation of a multifaceted ergonomics program to prevent injuries associated with patient handling tasksQ50122536
Quantitative Assessment of Bed Rise Difficulty in Young and Elderly WomenQ52861996
P433issue1
P304page(s)50-66
P577publication date2008-02-01
P1433published inClinical Nursing ResearchQ5133780
P1476titleBed and toilet height as potential environmental risk factors
P478volume17

Reverse relations

cites work (P2860)
Q38758748Circumstances of Falls With Fractured Femur in Residents of Australian Nursing Homes
Q44796424Exploring the factors that influence functional performance among nursing home residents.
Q38944533Factors associated with eating performance for long-term care residents with moderate-to-severe cognitive impairment.
Q39193529How are service users instructed to measure home furniture for provision of minor assistive devices?
Q37004560How feasible was a bed-height alert system?
Q36540197Is it possible to identify risks for injurious falls in hospitalized patients?
Q40211029Nursing staff's awareness of keeping beds in the lowest position to prevent falls and fall injuries in an adult acute surgical inpatient care setting
Q30843217The safety of hospital beds: ingress, egress, and in-bed mobility
Q49267331The use of evidence-based guidance to enable reliable and accurate measurements of the home environment
Q38903152Traumatic Facial Injuries Among Elderly Nursing Home Residents: Never Event or Frequent Occurrence?