USE OF RESTRAINTS IN NURSING HOMES HAS DECLINED
A report by the federal Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality shows that the use of restraints in nursing homes has declined 40 percent in recent years. Use of restraints was common in many nursing homes until a 1987 federal law made it illegal to use restraints to discipline or as a matter of convenience. In 2006, 5.9 percent of patients were repeatedly physically restrained, down from 9.7% in 2002.
The states with the highest percentage of restraint use were California, Arkansas, and Oklahoma while Nebraska, and Iowa, Kansas, and Maine had the lowest. Under the law, restraints can be used for a medical reason, such as preventing a patient from tearing out an IV. Research has shown that restraints can negatively affect nursing home residents' mental and physical health, causing depression, pressure sores, and loss of strength, among other things.
For more on the AHRQ findings, click here.
-Adapted from: “Use of Nursing Home Restraints Has Declined” http://www.elderlawanswers.com/resources/article.asp?id=6835§ion=4&state= Last Updated: 3/31/2008, cited in: ElderLaw News from ElderLawAnswers, http://www.elderlawanswers.com.
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