1 / 39

R educing Falls for Older People

R educing Falls for Older People. Ngaire Kerse, FRNZCGP, PhD Department of General Practice and Primary Health Care University of Auckland Presentation 2 to National Falls Programme Expert Advisory Group meeting 13 July 2012, HQSC. Definitions.

malory
Download Presentation

R educing Falls for Older People

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Reducing Falls for Older People Ngaire Kerse, FRNZCGP, PhD Department of General Practice and Primary Health Care University of Auckland Presentation 2 to National Falls Programme Expert Advisory Group meeting 13 July 2012, HQSC

  2. Definitions • An unexpected event in which the participants come to rest on the ground, floor, or lower level • “In the past month, have you had any fall including a slip or trip in which you lost your balance and landed on the floor or ground or lower level?” Lamb SE et al. J Am Geriatr Soc 2005;53:1618-22

  3. Hospitalisation

  4. Mortality

  5. Psychotropics Depression Dementia Multiple co-morbidity Age & previous falls & Wandering & gait 6x Wandrng & environmt 5x Environmt & depressn 3x Personal risk age, living alone, residential care Frailty Lower leg weakness Balance problems Visual problems

  6. The mechanism The place – environment Other people, context The person risk factors The exposure Risky activity

  7. Community • 30% in 1 year • Injury common • Hip fracture tip of the iceburg • Risk factors • Poor mobility • Lower limb, balance • Vision • Medication

  8. Cochrane review Community living older people aged ≥60 years • 111 RCTs, n = 55,303 • 43 exercise alone • 31 multifactorial • 13 vitamin D • 10 multiple (8 with exercise) • 8 home safety Gillespie LD et al. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2009(2) Art. No.: CD007146!

  9. Exercise programmes Effect of exercise programmes in reducing the rate and risk of falling “should now be regarded as established” • Group exercise, multiple components • Rate ratio 0.78 95%CI 0.71 – 0.86 • Individual exercise at home – the Otago Exercise P • Rate ratio 0.66 95%CI 0.53 – 0.82 • Life Programme Clemson 2010 • Tai chi • Rate ratio 0.63 95%CI 0.52 – 0.78 • Effective when selected/not selected for risk of falling Otago Exercise Programme http://www.acc.co.nz/oep

  10. Balance training is key • 44 RCTs community and residential care • Rate ratio 0.83 95%CI 0.75 – 0.91 • Challenging balance exercises, >50 hours over the trial period, no walking programme • Rate ratio 0.58 95%CI 0.48 – 0.69 • Lesser effect in higher risk participants (P=0.09) • One trial only with balance alone (Wolf 1996) NS Sherrington C et al. J Am Geriatr Soc 2008;56:2234-43!

  11. Effective single strategies • Home safety assessment and modification for those at high risk only (6 trials) • Risk of falling 21% • Vitamin D (only if lower levels, 2 trials), no reduction overall • Gradual withdrawal of psychotropic medication (1 trial) • Rate of falls 66% • Medication review (GP one-on-one with pharmacist ) • Risk of falling 39% • Cataract surgery, pacemakers, single lens glasses Clemson L et al. J Aging Health 2008;20:9541 Gillespie LD et al. Cochrane Database Syst Rev 2009(2) Art. No.: CD007146!

  12. Med review

  13. Clinic based - ED Postural hypotension Visual acuity Balance Cognition Depression Carotid sinus studies Medication review Home safety assessment and advice Close J et al. Lancet 1999;353:93-7 Home based Postural hypotension Sedative medications Use of ≥4 medications Transfer skills, grab bars Environmental hazards Gait training, assistive device Balance exercises, exercises against resistance Tinetti ME et al. N Engl J Med 1994;331:821-7 Multifactorial intervention

  14. Single interventions

  15. Multifactorial interventions

  16. Conclusions: falls and injury • common problem • disastrous consequences • identified risks • Interventions may maintain independence, stop hip fracture

  17. Guidelines AGS UKSoc • Screen all >64 “have you fallen” • Examine gait on all • Full examination • Fallen and frail • Medications medications medications • Refer, Optimal medical mngmt Exercise, OT home

  18. Residential care Falls are 3 x the rate of community dwelling older people 61% of all residents fall Hip fracture 10x rate of community dwellers. Total cost of falls 41 mi yearly (1995) 187 mi spent on falls in 2 years (ACC only) 2/3 of these costs are from residential care residents

  19. Hazards

  20. Unsuccessful trial – Auckland 2004 Increased falls 1.34 (1.06-1.72) ?mobility ?staffing ?measurement Kerse JAGS 2004

  21. Results Trials 41 trials – 25,442 15 cluster RCT 30 in nursing care 11 hospitals, 1 acute, 6 subacute 13 countries UK 10, USA 9, Australia 6 21 individual assessment CGA 3, funcl 1, falls risk 5 (NH) 4 (hosp) Mobility 2, ex cap 3 Behav 1 meds 1 Participants Age 83, 73% female Conditions Cognition - 4 trials specifically targetted cognitively impaired Stroke – 1 Hip fracture – 1 NH 20 trials, 10 rest home 1 acute hosptial 6 subacute • ProFaNE (Prevention of Falls Network Europe) • http://www.profane.eu.org

  22. Nursing care homes - Vitamin D

  23. Exercises – overall

  24. Exercises – combination exercise modalities

  25. Exercises – by type

  26. Success in residential care Multifaceted Staff and resident education Balance and strength exercises Environmental adaptations Hip protectors Resident choice Falls – 0.55 (0.41 – 0.75) Fallers & frequent fallers reduced Time to first fall increased (Becker 2004, Germany)

  27. Becker; by cognition

  28. Results Nursing care homes Effect of exercise inconsistent Multifactorial interventions Team based > nurse led Vitamin D effective Knowledge alone ineffective

  29. Overall success Exercise Orthogeriatrics AT&R Less success Acute Hospitals

  30. Exercise - hospitals

  31. Multifactorial – hospitals

  32. Stenvall – ortho and geriatric ward Sweden

  33. Stenvall

  34. Healey elderly care wards UK

  35. Cummings – acute & subacute Sydney

  36. Hospitals • Multifactorial • Success related to resources • Exercises promising

More Related