Literature DB >> 17766675

Step by step: integrating evidence-based fall-risk management into senior centers.

Dorothy I Baker1, Margaret Gottschalk, Luann M Bianco.   

Abstract

PURPOSE: Our purpose in this project was to conceptualize and implement evidence-based fall-prevention programming into senior centers. We present challenges to this process and strategies to overcome them. DESIGN AND METHODS: We carried out a dissemination project in nine diverse senior centers in Connecticut. Participants included investigators from the Connecticut Collaboration for Fall Prevention (CCFP), senior center administrators, and trained staff interventionists implementing a program of fall prevention based on the Yale Frailty and Injury Cooperative Studies of Intervention Trials (known as the Yale FICSIT). Using CCFP materials that were based on the stages of change, senior center staff developed methods to integrate fall-prevention programming into their centers. We extracted implementation challenges, and the strategies that senior center staff developed to overcome them, from the minutes of monthly work-group meetings. Monthly counts of individual assessments were also a source of data.
RESULTS: Challenges included staffing and the delineation of authority, structural issues, engaging senior center membership, cultural issues, and the modification of existing practices. Each senior center devised site-specific methods to overcome these challenges when CCFP investigators convened work-group meetings. We developed creative strategies to inform senior center membership about fall prevention, and in the first 18 months, 4% of members scheduled individual assessments. IMPLICATIONS: The challenges of integrating evidence-based fall-prevention programming into existing senior center services can be negotiated by collaboration among senior center administrators, health providers, the center membership, and researchers. This experience suggests that senior centers may be important venues to reach older adults with fall-prevention programming.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2007        PMID: 17766675     DOI: 10.1093/geront/47.4.548

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Gerontologist        ISSN: 0016-9013


  8 in total

1.  Provider-Related Linkages Between Primary Care Clinics and Community-Based Senior Centers Associated With Diabetes-Related Outcomes.

Authors:  Polly Hitchcock Noël; Chen-Pin Wang; Erin P Finley; Sara E Espinoza; Michael L Parchman; Mary J Bollinger; Helen P Hazuda
Journal:  J Appl Gerontol       Date:  2018-06-20

2.  Barriers and facilitators to senior centers participating in translational research.

Authors:  Holly C Felix; Becky Adams; Carol E Cornell; Jennifer K Fausett; Rebecca A Krukowski; ShaRhonda J Love; T Elaine Prewitt; Delia Smith West
Journal:  Res Aging       Date:  2012-11-20

3.  Implementing evidence-based practices: considerations for the hospice setting.

Authors:  Sara Sanders; Melissa Lehan Mackin; Jimmy Reyes; Keela Herr; Marita Titler; Perry Fine; Chris Forcucci
Journal:  Am J Hosp Palliat Care       Date:  2010-02-18       Impact factor: 2.500

Review 4.  It takes a village to prevent falls: reconceptualizing fall prevention and management for older adults.

Authors:  D A Ganz; G E Alkema; S Wu
Journal:  Inj Prev       Date:  2008-08       Impact factor: 2.399

5.  Association between treatment or usual care region and hospitalization for fall-related traumatic brain injury in the Connecticut Collaboration for Fall Prevention.

Authors:  Terrence E Murphy; Dorothy I Baker; Linda S Leo-Summers; Heather G Allore; Mary E Tinetti
Journal:  J Am Geriatr Soc       Date:  2013-09-19       Impact factor: 5.562

6.  A protocol for evidence-based targeting and evaluation of statewide strategies for preventing falls among community-dwelling older people in Victoria, Australia.

Authors:  Lesley Day; Caroline F Finch; Keith D Hill; Terry P Haines; Lindy Clemson; Margaret Thomas; Catherine Thompson
Journal:  Inj Prev       Date:  2010-12-24       Impact factor: 2.399

7.  Primary care-public health linkages: Older primary care patients with prediabetes & type 2 diabetes encouraged to attend community-based senior centers.

Authors:  Polly H Noël; Michael L Parchman; Erin P Finley; Chen-Pin Wang; Mary Bollinger; Sara E Espinoza; Helen P Hazuda
Journal:  Prev Med Rep       Date:  2016-06-29

8.  Third Places for Health Promotion with Older Adults: Using the Consolidated Framework for Implementation Research to Enhance Program Implementation and Evaluation.

Authors:  Mary E Northridge; Susan S Kum; Bibhas Chakraborty; Ariel Port Greenblatt; Stephen E Marshall; Hua Wang; Carol Kunzel; Sara S Metcalf
Journal:  J Urban Health       Date:  2016-10       Impact factor: 3.671

  8 in total

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