Bed rails provide support and fall prevention for people with limited mobility but can cause entrapment, falls from climbing, and agitation. Use a person-centered assessment to weigh benefits and harms. Employ practical precautions - proper mattress fit, secure installation, staff training, and alternatives such as low beds, floor mats, or sensor alarms. Reassess regularly and choose the least-restrictive solution.
Why bed rails are used
Bed rails remain a common support option in hospitals, nursing homes, and home care. Clinicians use them to help people who have limited mobility, are at risk of falling, or need assistance turning and repositioning in bed. For some patients, rails also provide a sense of security when getting in and out of bed.
Understand the benefits and the trade-offs
Bed rails can:
- Help with turning, repositioning, and moving toward the edge of the bed.
- Provide handholds for entering or exiting the bed.
- Reduce the chance of rolling out of bed during sleep or transfers.
Assess the person, not the bed
Decisions about rails should come from a person-centered assessment that weighs mobility, cognition, skin integrity, behavior, and fall risk. Use the least-restrictive option that meets the person's needs. Involve the patient and family in decisions and document the care plan and rationale.
Practical precautions to reduce harm
- Check mattress fit and bed frame compatibility. Gaps between the mattress and rail can create entrapment hazards.
- Secure rails and hardware per manufacturer instructions. Loose or damaged rails increase risk.
- Consider alternatives before installing full-height rails: low beds, floor mats, bed-exit alarms, sensor mats, increased observation, and supervised transfers.
- Use padding or gap fillers only when they are compatible with the rail design and manufacturer guidance.
- Monitor patients regularly after rails are installed. Reassess frequently, especially when a patient's condition or mobility changes.
- Train staff and caregivers on safe installation, common hazards, and how to respond if a patient attempts to climb over a rail.
When to remove rails
Remove or avoid rails when a less-restrictive option can safely manage the risk. If rails cause agitation, physical injury, or interfere with care, revisit the care plan immediately.
Final point
Bed rails can prevent falls and aid mobility, but they are not risk-free. Balance benefits and harms through individualized assessment, proper installation, ongoing monitoring, and by choosing the least-restrictive, safest option for each person.