| Literature DB >> 27129303 |
John N Morris1, Elizabeth P Howard2, Knight Steel3, Katherine Berg4, Achille Tchalla5, Amy Munankarmi6, Daniel David7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: According to the CDC, falls rank among the leading causes of accidental death in the United States, resulting in significant health care costs annually. In this paper we present information about everyday lifestyle decisions of the older adult that may help reduce the risk of falling. We pursued two lines of inquiry: first, we identify and then test known mutable fall risk factors and ask how the resolution of such problems correlates with changes in fall rates. Second, we identify a series of everyday lifestyle options that persons may follow and then ask, does such engagement (e.g., engagement in exercise programs) lessen the older adult's risk of falling and if it does, will the relationship hold as the count of risk factors increases?Entities:
Keywords: Community-dwelling older adults; Strategies to reduce risk of falls; interRAI assessment
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27129303 PMCID: PMC4851816 DOI: 10.1186/s12877-016-0267-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Geriatr ISSN: 1471-2318 Impact factor: 3.921
Fall risk domain and assessment item
| Fall risk domain | Assessment item |
|---|---|
| Physical –Movement Related | Unsteady gait |
| Walks with help | |
| Climb stairs with help | |
| Requires help in doing housework | |
| Requires help in cooking | |
| Requires help in shopping | |
| Physical –Weakness/Debility | Dressing lower body with help |
| Transfers with help | |
| Bathes with help | |
| Experienced worsening ADL in 90 days | |
| Clinical – Cognitive/Mental | Cognitive decline in past 90 days |
| Memory problem | |
| Anxiety diagnosis | |
| Depression diagnosis | |
| Clinical -- Physical/General | Vision problem |
| Dizziness | |
| Poor self-reported health | |
| Not continent | |
| Acute health flare-up | |
| Constipation (tested, not significant) | |
| Difficulty sleeping (tested, not significant) | |
| Fatigue | |
| Pain intensity | |
| Breakthrough pain |
Domains protective of falls risk
| Protective domains | Assessment item |
|---|---|
| Physical Exercise | Three + hours exercise a day |
| Bikes | |
| Hikes/walks | |
| Swims | |
| Pilates/yoga/Tai Chi | |
| Treadmill/steppers/weights/resistance | |
| Cognitive Stimulation | Uses computer |
| Does crosswords | |
| Takes education course(s) |
Fig. 1Fall Rates Based on Movement Related Risk Variables (with time 2 risk odds ratios and % problem resolved)
Fig. 2Fall Rates Based on Weakness/Debility Related Risk Variables (with Time 2 risk odds ratios and % resolved)
Fig. 3Fall Rates Based on Cognitive/Mental Related Risk Variables (with Time 2 risk odds ratios and % resolved)
Fig. 4Fall Rates Based on Physical and General Clinical Complexity Related Risk Variables (with time 2 risk odds ratio and % resolved)
Fig. 5Time 1 Fall Rates Based on Types of Exercise at Baseline (with time 1 risk odds ratio and % so engaged)
Fig. 6Time 1 Fall Rates Based on Engagement in Cognitively Stimulating Exercises (with time 1 risk odds ratio and % so engaged)
Fig. 7Time 1 Fall Rates Based on Exercise and Cognitive Stimulation Life Choices Across Categories of Risk Summary Scale (percent of sample in risk category)