Metrics Definition - Patient Mobility

Patient Mobility

Inpatient mobility is defined as movement associated with changing body position or location or by transferring from one place to another, by carrying, moving or manipulating objects, by walking, running or climbing, and by using various forms of transportation. A mobility event is associated with a subdomain of mobility, such as rolling over in bed, act of sitting, transferring or walking. These events occur when patients participate in physiotherapy, nursing care, exercise and activities of daily living in the hospital context.

Mobility Promotion and Documentation

Early mobilization of inpatients helps prevent deconditioning and has been shown to shorten hospital encounters while improving outcomes. Loss of muscle strength and function begins within the first 24 hours of immobility, immediately accelerating frailty-exacerbated risks for complications such as lung atelectasis, deep vein thrombosis, skin breakdown, delirium and hospital-acquired infections. 

Mobilizing inpatients at least three times a day is an expected best practice. It is also expected that mobilization activities are documented and trended throughout a hospital stay.

Mobility Promotion for Patients with Frailty

Mobilizing patients with frailty is essential for maintaining their physical health, functional abilities, psychological well-being, and overall quality of life. It helps prevent complications associated with immobility and promotes faster recovery and better long-term outcomes.

Note: tracking mobility for patients with frailty should be preceded by completing the Frailty Screening. Unless patients at risk have been identified, mobility cannot be reliably tracked for this cohort of patients.

Workflow

Patient Mobilization Tracking

Nursing daily care flowsheets include rows for recording what mobility events were promoted at what times.  These are typically used on mobile workstations as a nurse is doing patient rounds.


Data

Patient Mobility Tracking

A "Daily Care/Safety" nursing flowsheet (FLT 226) is used as the record of mobility documentation for current measures. This flowsheet has a subsection focusing on "Activity/Mobility" with a row for recording the current activity level for a patient as well as the patient's response to a mobilization intervention. 

Physical Therapy, Occupational Therapy, Recreational Therapy, Therapy Assistant Visits

Interactions with these allied health disciplines is captured in the Attendance/Visit activity if a visit is face-to-face and lasts 5 minutes or longer. Such visit events are proxies for structured patient mobility activities.

Metrics

Patient Mobility Tracking

Description

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Analytics Definition


Mobility Tracking - Patients with Frailty

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Limitations

Documentation Activity

The measured activity is a documentation task, not actual patient mobility events. The associated nursing workflows are supported with Connect Care Navigators that help to remind about tasks that should be performed at particular times and in particular contexts.

There are a number of ways by which a patient mobility metric can mis-represent actual patient mobility interventions or actions:

Documentation Norms

Nursing and allied health care professions heed documentation norms that promote "charting by exception" to streamline documentation. This approach assumes that a patient has displayed a normal (expected) response for all assessment components and documentation focuses on abnormal or unexpected responses. As this is the way that most nursing flowsheets are used, there is a good chance that the mobility section of the Daily Care/Safety flowsheet will be biased towards reporting of variance from expected mobility at a particular stage of an inpatient encounter.

Other Measures

Physiotherapy, occupational therapy and recreational therapy health care professionals have their own documentation tools where mobility events associated are recorded. These can be much more specific about offered interventions, patient capacity and compliance and indicators of meaningful progress. Important information can be recorded as unstructured text, with no associated flowsheet or other data points. Currently, this information is not incorporated into the base patient mobility documentation metric.

Reports

Radar Dashboards

Reporting Workbench

Slicer-Dicer

Components