A TOTAL of 17 patients fractured their hips as a result of falling in hospital in Hampshire in the first eight months of last year.

Nine of the patients were being treated at Southampton University Hospital and eight at Hampshire Hospitals NHS Trust.

Charity Age UK said falls resulting in injury can have "devastating" long-term effects on older people who account for the majority of hospital falls.

The figures have been released by the National Audit of Inpatient Falls by the Royal College of Physicians.

The NAIF was first launched in 2015 to provide a snapshot of the fall prevention activity carried out in hospitals across England and Wales.

After a further snapshot in 2017 revealed slow progress on improving key measures, the assessment was reformed and relaunched at the start of last year.

The new audit focuses on monitoring the care of patients who suffer hip fractures after falling in inpatient settings, and has resulted in 12 recommendations being made to trusts and health boards in the two countries.

Two such recommendations are for a patient to receive a medical assessment within 30 minutes of a fall, as recommended by NICE, and for hip fracture management to start "without delay".

But patients who fell at Southampton University Hospital waited a median time of nine hours and 48 minutes to be admitted for hip fracture care last year, the data reveals – much longer than the national median time of six hours and 18 minutes.

The audit found that the trust does have NICE-recommended flat lifting equipment available on all sites, which can be used to move patients with suspected hip fractures.

It does not provide walking aids to all newly admitted patients who need one.

The waiting time in the Hampshire Hospitals Trust was three hours and 18 minutes.

Across England and Wales, 910 falls resulting in hip fractures were reported between January and August last year. Of those, the most common location (32 per cent) was on medical wards, with 21 per cent on wards for the elderly.

Falls are the most frequently reported incident affecting hospital inpatients, with 247,000 occurring each year in England, according to the NHS.

The NAIF report says elderly patients are more likely to be severely injured after falling, and are twice as likely to die as a result of falling in hospital compared to those who fall outside hospital.

Caroline Abrahams, Age UK’s charity director, said: "No one should experience a fall while under the care of a hospital, and certainly not one so severe that it results in a hip fracture.

"Such an injury can have a devastating long-term effect on an older person. It can lead to permanent disability, loss of independence and confidence, and future mental health need.

"Hospitals should be safe environments that both deliver care that minimises harm while also allowing people to have some physical activity wherever possible."