The Sunday Telegraph

Get hospital patients up to end ‘pyjama paralysis’

- By Laura Donnelly HEALTH EDITOR

HOSPITAL patients will be told to get up and dressed in the daytime in an attempt to end “pyjama paralysis” that can cause premature frailty.

Britain’s chief nursing officer will today launch a national campaign to get patients moving after pilot schemes found that getting patients out of bed boosted their health and got them home earlier.

Earlier this year, Prof Jane Cummings asked ward staff to try a 70day “challenge” to get patients up, dressed and moving wherever possible. It follows warnings that a 10day stay in hospital can mean an elderly person loses 10 per cent of muscle mass – equivalent to 10 years of ageing.

Time spent bed-bound is linked to an increased risk of ending up in a care home or nursing home after being discharged from hospital, because of the amount of time spent bed-bound.

Today health officials said that the efforts to get patients up and dressed saw a dramatic fall in bed sores, patient falls, and satisfacti­on levels – and resulted in 710,000 fewer days spent in hospital overall. More than 10,000 patients were involved in schemes that attempted to prioritise dressing and mobility on the ward between April and June of this year.

Prof Cummings said the schemes showed that it should now become “the gold standard” for patients to be up and dressed daily, in hospitals and care homes across the country. She told The Sunday Telegraph: “For many people wearing pyjamas or nightcloth­es reinforces feeling unwell and can hinder a speedy recovery. We know that many people who are in hospital beds could be helped to get back on their feet sooner, which helps them to get back home to loved ones more quickly.

“The campaign to end PJ paralysis has shown what can be achieved when this gold standard is adopted.” Studies show that three in five immobile, older patients in hospital had no medical reason requiring bed rest.

Salford Royal Hospital was one of the first to adopt the campaign that saw staff setting up group meals, encouragin­g visits from therapy dogs and setting up activities for those recovering from ill health. Staff said it was crucial to encourage a “sense of normality” among patients, to avoid feelings of institutio­nalisation, which could result in frailty.

Hospital staff in Salford, Oldham, Bury, Rochdale and north Manchester drew up schemes that would encourage patients to increase activity levels. Sarah Elliot, the ward manager for the Pendleton Suite, a 49-bed unit for patients recovering from emergency treatment at Salford Royal Hospital, said: “Whether it’s a visit from a therapy dog, taking part in group games, or joining a social mealtime – every day of the week there is a reason for people on Pendleton to get up, dressed and moving.

“Before we started the campaign we had been working towards reducing the number of falls on the ward, but by getting more patients mobile more often and use of technology we recorded a further reduction in falls from an average of 12 per month to two in July this year.”

Prof Brian Dolan, the visiting professor of nursing at Oxford Institute of Nursing, Midwifery and Allied Health Research, said: “Encouragin­g patients to get dressed everyday rather than remaining in their pyjamas or hospital gown when they do not need to boosts recovery and makes the most of precious time so it can be better spent with loved ones.”

 ??  ?? Prof Cummings said getting people up and about quickened their recovery
Prof Cummings said getting people up and about quickened their recovery

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