Abstract
INTRODUCTION
Postural hypotension is a significant modifiable risk factor for inpatient falls in older
adults. National guidelines recommend lying and standing blood pressure (LSBP)
measurement for patients at risk of falls. On our geriatric wards, which care for acute,
long-stay and orthogeriatric patients, we observed inconsistent LSBP documentation
and delays in identifying postural hypotension. Staff reported difficulty locating LSBP
records and a perception that fall prevention was being deprioritised in comparison to
post-fall care. This project aimed to assess current practice and identify opportunities to
improve recognition and documentation of LSBP in patients with falls risk.
METHOD
We performed a retrospective review of 63 patients identified as being at risk of falls
between April and June 2025. We recorded whether LSBP was requested, measured,
and documented, as well as whether this was completed within 24 hours of admission. A
staff survey (n=20) was used to explore perceived barriers to LSBP measurement and
documentation.
RESULTS
Of the 63 patients, 34 (54%) had LSBP requested in the notes and 22 (35%) had LSBP
recorded. Only 18 patients (29%) had both requested and recorded. Survey responses
identified time constraints, unclear responsibility between doctors and nurses, and lack
of guidance on follow-up or acting on abnormal findings.
CONCLUSIONS
This initial review identified documentation gaps and system-level barriers to routine
LSBP monitoring. Planned interventions include teaching sessions, posters,
interdisciplinary discussion and the introduction of documentation prompts. These aim
to embed LSBP measurement into routine practice, improve early identification of
postural hypotension and reduce avoidable inpatient falls
Comments
Postural hypotension
Hello. Thank you for your poster. What steps do you propose may help further improve undertaking and documentation of lying and standing bloods pressures?
Thank you for your poster,…
Thank you for your poster, did the change in uptake lead to any change interventions?