Assisted Fall Technique Step-by-Step | Skill for Nurses & Nursing Assistants

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  • Опубликовано: 4 окт 2024
  • If you notice a patient beginning to fall, follow these steps to help lower them safely to floor. Always stay with the patient and call for additional help.
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Комментарии • 75

  • @nadinelangis1302
    @nadinelangis1302 10 месяцев назад +38

    I have been doing this kind of work for years. Don't want them to be on the floor but it's better for you and the client and to reduce injuries.

  • @jenessasaeger1182
    @jenessasaeger1182 10 месяцев назад +32

    I think people are missing the point ... You are not trying to stop them from falling but to minimize the impact on the way down. You cant foght gravity but you can keep the person from hitting their head .....

  • @kapple654
    @kapple654 Год назад +25

    ha ha - this is so much better than the british NHS video which instructs you to just push them into the nearest wall so that they can slide down that like a thrown fried egg. omg! Lordy.
    very mobile yet still protects the nurses back - I wouldn't be surprised if the army developed this technique - its excellent!

    • @laurenlortz5583
      @laurenlortz5583 10 месяцев назад

      I love 💕 but it’s just me and I love 💕 too much to say I just got to go in to the new car 🚘 so I’ll be back on the new car 🚘 get some more of

    • @kapple654
      @kapple654 10 месяцев назад +1

      @@laurenlortz5583 wtf!!!!???

    • @aDimeee
      @aDimeee 8 месяцев назад +1

      😂😂😂😂😂😂

    • @Ophelia11
      @Ophelia11 2 месяца назад

      😅😂😅😂 NHS in action. Not surprised.

    • @AaronAtkins1.
      @AaronAtkins1. Месяц назад

      Actually in UK we are also told that we should not assist the patient down and that they should just fall. We can be sued if we try to stop a fall and cause injury to our patient. They know its our instinct and most of us would rather lose out job then let a patient fall. It's against out role as human beings not alone nurses.

  • @HaloMediaRecords
    @HaloMediaRecords Год назад +62

    This method works for elderly who weigh less than 150 lbs maybe? Good luck busting your knees when the patient is 200 lbs

  • @Mainly-boy-outdoors
    @Mainly-boy-outdoors 10 месяцев назад +4

    Thank you for posting this video.

  • @lumevelyneniba4528
    @lumevelyneniba4528 Год назад +14

    Good content indeed, i learned so much

  • @mojojeinxs9960
    @mojojeinxs9960 Год назад +11

    In assistant living we do not catch falling residents. Because if someone can not vear weight they should be in skill nursing with a hoyer lift. How do you catch someone over 200 pounds when you only weigh 110? It's humanly impossible .

    • @familyjaime7989
      @familyjaime7989 4 дня назад

      You don’t have to catch them just help them to fall safe

  • @ikr2377
    @ikr2377 Год назад +9

    Hi nurse student from UK.
    We were taught in manual handling to let them fall.and move away.

    • @nannie34
      @nannie34 Год назад +3

      Nooooo

    • @Jin-vw7yq
      @Jin-vw7yq Год назад +10

      Cna student here, they told us that when someone is falling, dont catch the patient but dont either let them fall completely. Guide them to the floor because if you catch them, you are going to fall with them and many reasons.
      And if you let them fall just like that, the patient would get injured. So instead, guide them to the floor and make you they wont get hit with anything.

    • @ikr2377
      @ikr2377 Год назад +4

      @@Jin-vw7yq that sounds more compassionate than what we in the UK were tought.
      I think the concept behind it was,if we as a nurse got injured we would lose our career and the NHS won't pay out.
      I found it a bit uncaring to allow them to fallntobthe floor

    • @lienbijs1205
      @lienbijs1205 Год назад +3

      @@ikr2377 In the Netherlands it is also the " legslide" plus never do an uplift to avoid the fall.

    • @nursingandnclexmastery
      @nursingandnclexmastery  Год назад +2

      @Jin This technique sounds like the assisted method demonstrated in this video.

  • @nanina2034
    @nanina2034 10 месяцев назад +10

    My weight is 116 lbs and my biggest patient has 440 lbs😂This looks like science fiction to me.The tutorial is good but sometimes you can't help them.

  • @mayuriniluka736
    @mayuriniluka736 3 месяца назад

    Thank you very much.your great.this vidio is very important

  • @DeRocco21
    @DeRocco21 9 месяцев назад +3

    i always put my leg behind them so the slide down it if they fall

  • @pweetypoo
    @pweetypoo 3 месяца назад +1

    In Australia this is not taught to us. It's against the rules to assist in falls.

  • @jaymorgan.
    @jaymorgan. 7 месяцев назад +24

    If you’re more than 130lbs good and taller than 5’8, good luck being caught. You’re hitting the ground. Just being honest. You’re too heavy to catch and nobody is trying to throw their back out not even big strong men. If we can prevent the fall we will, but on the other hand we aren’t about to throw our backs out to catch a fall or someone too heavy to catch.

    • @estrellagarcia8032
      @estrellagarcia8032 29 дней назад

      El pwñlooñokij bwjjwuja n ❤❤mn❤uj❤😊

    • @PROXYheart
      @PROXYheart 13 дней назад

      You can catch someone without carrying their weight on your back

  • @cher9626
    @cher9626 2 года назад +3

    Hey can you do a video on catheterization and wound care?

    • @nursingandnclexmastery
      @nursingandnclexmastery  2 года назад

      Foley catheterization: ruclips.net/video/4cx9vmeO-YI/видео.html
      Surgical wound care: ruclips.net/video/1TVPQJApwyE/видео.html

  • @mokooh3280
    @mokooh3280 7 дней назад

    i am a vietnam disabled combat vet nurses are bad ass

  • @carolhenshaw2352
    @carolhenshaw2352 7 дней назад

    I was always taught that if someone is falling you let them, otherwise it could end up being you injured, and I wouldn't put my knee like that under him!!

  • @mattkim421
    @mattkim421 6 месяцев назад +1

    Great. At the end the salaries are not worth the stress.

  • @_GandalfTheGrey_
    @_GandalfTheGrey_ 9 месяцев назад +1

    How often does this happen on an average day?

    • @iskiiwizz536
      @iskiiwizz536 8 месяцев назад

      10 times

    • @NunYaBiz1313
      @NunYaBiz1313 6 месяцев назад +1

      Depends on the person that has health issues

    • @auturgicflosculator2183
      @auturgicflosculator2183 4 месяца назад

      In-home care with one patient you're able to helicopter nurse if need be, maybe never if you're lucky. Big, over-crowded, understaffed hospital? Could be near enough to constant to feel overwhelming.

  • @sammysam2615
    @sammysam2615 3 месяца назад

    When patients fall, most of the time it's the CNAs doing the lifting. At least it was when I worked on Telemetry. And if you are a guy, you were the lift team

  • @donnalittle1507
    @donnalittle1507 28 дней назад

    I’m too old a nurse for that, either slide down a wall or the bedside, failing that I’m not risking my back.

  • @Anonymous-so1ho
    @Anonymous-so1ho Год назад +4

    This is great and all but I have a much faster method

    • @Nurse_pretee
      @Nurse_pretee Год назад

      She should’ve immediately pushed a chair behind him

    • @Anonymous-so1ho
      @Anonymous-so1ho Год назад

      @@Nurse_pretee I was thinking more like this ruclips.net/video/t1XzYMQkXDU/видео.html

  • @JamiAsha
    @JamiAsha 10 месяцев назад +1

    gd nurse

  • @Tttruuu
    @Tttruuu 3 месяца назад

    ouch that’s gonna hurt my foot

  • @ronaldmoore6619
    @ronaldmoore6619 Год назад +6

    Women lack the upper body strength to do this. It only works if the patient is able to assist.

    • @kapple654
      @kapple654 Год назад

      maybe

    • @laurenlortz5583
      @laurenlortz5583 10 месяцев назад

      DunwjudhuEfuneudnneduyb

    • @auturgicflosculator2183
      @auturgicflosculator2183 4 месяца назад

      My skinny, 5'3" late 50s mother can do this.

    • @auturgicflosculator2183
      @auturgicflosculator2183 4 месяца назад +1

      That said, it's best to have more than one small person assisting a large patient. Difficult with the worker shortage, but sometimes necessary.

  • @adrybernal
    @adrybernal 2 месяца назад

    Working as Assistant in Nursing, we have been trained to prevent a fall. Falls are unavoidable unfortunately in most cases. I believe the technique in this video is not accurate either helpful, the way that she is holding him, may end up with two injury people.

  • @jaymorgan.
    @jaymorgan. 7 месяцев назад +2

    The patient has the right to fall. I ensure resident safety but if the resident stands up without assistance or they’re just too weak to walk then they shouldn’t walk! Too many are stubborn. The floor is where they will land. If anyone disagrees they are lying.

    • @auturgicflosculator2183
      @auturgicflosculator2183 4 месяца назад

      It's not a nurse's job to judge their patient.

    • @jaymorgan.
      @jaymorgan. 4 месяца назад

      @@auturgicflosculator2183 actually it is, esp when it comes to safety. What are you talking about?

  • @2310C
    @2310C Месяц назад

    She should have quickly rushed over there, stopped him and put him back in bed.Happened to me many times and I followed my instincts quickly. Falls are NO joke.

  • @bile-t5k
    @bile-t5k 4 месяца назад

    Em sang đức. Em chăm sóc bố mẹ mấy anh tây. Em cũng không giết người cướp của. Bán ma túy . Các anh ạ. Em chăm sóc bố mẹ các anh ạ

  • @nataliarosales1106
    @nataliarosales1106 10 месяцев назад

    JAaaaa😂😂😂😂😂😂 mecano de risa

  • @stephaniejordan9066
    @stephaniejordan9066 4 месяца назад

    No the Nurse and CNA stood back and didn't help.

  • @christinerobertson8538
    @christinerobertson8538 19 дней назад

    Your nurses are so hot❤

  • @spaghettidogpal
    @spaghettidogpal 5 месяцев назад

    Hell no