Internal and External Factors Influencing Nurses' Compliance in Risk of Fall Prevention Procedures

Dublin Core

Title

Internal and External Factors Influencing Nurses' Compliance in Risk of Fall Prevention Procedures

Subject

compliance, fall risk, standard operating procedures

Description

Introduction: Nursing care is the most essential element in health services.
Professional nurses must provide safe, effective services and participate in
maintaining patient safety. Safety for patients is essential because it can
increase the value of professionalism. The research aims to analyze
internal and external factors regarding nurses' compliance in
implementing Standard Operating Procedures to prevent the risk of falls.
Methods: This research used an analytical observational design with a
cross-sectional approach using a sample of 107 respondents from two
hospitals in Jember.
Results: The results showed that internal factors influenced nurse
compliance in implementing SOP for patients at risk of falling (p-value
0.045). Regarding external factors, it was found that compliance in
implementing SOP for patients with fall risk did not have a significant effect
(p-value 0.948).
Conclusion: Continuous training, effective supervision, and work
environment support are important to increase nurses' compliance in
implementing SOPs to prevent falls. This research recommends
strengthening hospital training and supervision strategies to increase
nurse compliance, ultimately improving overall patient safety.

Creator

Arif Candra Gunawan1*, Dodi Wijaya1, & Anisah Ardiana1

Source

https://doi.org/10.37363/bnr.2025.63474

Date

23 July 2025

Contributor

peri irawan

Format

pdf

Language

english

Type

text

Files

Collection

Citation

Arif Candra Gunawan1*, Dodi Wijaya1, & Anisah Ardiana1, “Internal and External Factors Influencing Nurses' Compliance in Risk of Fall Prevention Procedures,” Repository Horizon University Indonesia, accessed April 11, 2026, https://repository.horizon.ac.id/items/show/11918.