| Literature DB >> 35832390 |
Aleksandra H Natora1,2, Jennifer Oxley1, Linda Barclay3, Kelvin Taylor1, Bruce Bolam4, Terry P Haines5,6.
Abstract
Objectives: Effective public policy to prevent falls among independent community-dwelling older adults is needed to address this global public health issue. This paper aimed to identify gaps and opportunities for improvement of future policies to increase their likelihood of success.Entities:
Keywords: community setting; falls prevention; injury prevention; older adults; policy analysis; public health policy
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35832390 PMCID: PMC9272743 DOI: 10.3389/ijph.2022.1604604
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Public Health ISSN: 1661-8556 Impact factor: 5.100
FIGURE 1Flow diagram showing selection of public policies for this scoping review and content evaluation (Melbourne, Australia, 2020–21).
Details of 47 policy documents identified in the scoping review and their key characteristics (sorted alphabetically by Country/State), (Melbourne, Australia, 2020–21).
| Authoring agency | Year | Title of policy | Language | Country/State | Jurisdiction level | Policy Type | Policy Frame—Single Issue Falls-specific policy or Multi-issue policy that Includes falls in remit | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | National Public Health Partnership (NPHP) [ | 2005 | National Falls Prevention Plan 2004 Onwards | English | Australia | National | Strategic plan | Falls Specific |
| 2. | National Public Health Partnership (NPHP) [ | 2005 | The National Injury Prevention and Safety Promotion Plan: 2004 – 2014 | English | Australia | National | Strategic plan | Multi-issue: Injury prevention |
| 3. | Hill et al. & National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) & Victorian Department of Health [ | 2011 | Community Falls Prevention Sustainability Guidelines: (supporting document to the Partnership Grant: Reducing falls among older people in Victoria: better evidence, better targeting, better outcomes.) | English | Australia | National | Government guideline | Falls specific |
| 4. | Department of Health and Ageing [ | 2011 | Don’t fall for it. Falls can be prevented! A guide to preventing falls for older people | English | Australia | National | Government guideline/consumer resource | Falls specific |
| 5. | Department of Health [ | 2020 | National Injury Prevention Strategy: 2020–2030. Draft for consultation | English | Australia | National | Strategic plan | Multi-issue: Injury prevention |
| 6. | NSW Health Department [ | 2011 | Prevention of Falls and Harm from Falls among Older People 2011–2015 | English | Australia, New South Wales | State | Strategic plan | Falls specific |
| 7. | NSW Health Department [ | 2005 | NSW Management Policy to reduce fall injury among older people 2003–2007 | English | Australia, New South Wales | State | Strategic plan | Falls specific |
| 8. | QLD Department of Health, Division of Chief Health Officer [ | 2009 | Strategic directions for injury prevention and safety promotion 2009–2012 | English | Australia, Queensland | State | Strategic plan | Multi-issue: Injury prevention |
| 9. | Department of Health and Human Services [ | 2011 | Victorian Public Health and Wellbeing Plan 2011–2015 | English | Australia, Victoria | State | Strategic plan | Multi-issue: Public health |
| 10. | Department of Health and Human Services [ | 2015 | Victorian Public Health and Wellbeing Plan 2015–2019 | English | Australia, Victoria | State | Strategic plan | Multi-issue: Public health |
| 11. | Department of Health and Human Services [ | 2019 | Victorian Public Health and Wellbeing Plan 2019–2023 | English | Australia, Victoria | State | Strategic plan | Multi-issue: Public health |
| 12. | WA Health Department [ | 2012 | WA Health Promotion Strategic Framework 2012–2016 | English | Australia, Western Australia | State | Strategic plan | Multi-issue: Health promotion |
| 13. | WA Health Department [ | 2017 | WA Health Promotion Strategic Framework 2017–2021 | English | Australia, Western Australia | State | Strategic plan | Multi-issue: Health promotion |
| 14. | Government of Canada [ | 2006 | Healthy Aging in Canada: A new vision, a vital investment. A Discussion Brief prepared for the Federal, Provincial and Territorial Committee of Officials (Seniors) | English | Canada | National | Action plan | Multi-issue: Healthy Ageing |
| 15. | Government of Canada [ | 2020 | New Horizons for Seniors Program | English and French | Canada | National | Government grant program | Falls specific |
| 16. | Public Health Agency of Canada [ | 2016 | You CAN prevent falls! | English | Canada | National | Government guideline/consumer resource | Falls specific |
| 17. | Public Health Agency of Canada [ | 2005 | Report on Seniors’ falls in Canada | English | Canada | National | Government policy document | Falls specific |
| 18. | Public Health Agency of Canada [ | 2014 | Seniors’ falls in Canada. Second Report | English | Canada | National | Government policy document | Falls specific |
| 19. | BC Injury Research and Prevention Unit and Ministry of Health, Scott et al. [ | 2014 | The Next Wave of Falls Prevention in British Columbia, A special report by the BC Fall and Injury Prevention Coalition (BCFIPC) | English | Canada, British Columbia | State | Government policy document | Falls specific |
| 20. | The State Council, The People’s Republic of China [ | 2016 | National Action Plan for Disability Prevention in China 2016–2020 | Abstract in English, Policy in Chinese | China | National | Action plan | Multi-issue: Public Health and Disability |
| 21. | People’s Republic of China [ | 1996 to current | Law of the People’s Republic of China on Protection of the Rights and Interests of the Elderly | Abstract in English, Policy in Chinese | China | National | Legislation | Multi-issue: Rights of Elderly |
| 22. | National Health and Family Planning Commission, The People’s Republic of China [ | 2016 | Healthy China 2030 | Abstract in English, Policy in Chinese | China | National | Action plan | Multi-issue: Public Health |
| 23. | European Commission, The European Innovation Partnership on Active and Healthy Ageing [ | 2011 | Strategic Implementation Plan for the European Innovation Partnership on Active and Healthy Ageing, Steering Group Working Document | English | Europe/Belgium | Multi-national | Implementation Plan | Multi-issue: Healthy Ageing |
| 24. | European Commission, The European Innovation Partnership on Active and Healthy Ageing [ | 2013 | Action Plan A2: Specific Action on Innovation in Support of ‘Personalized Health Management, starting with a Falls Prevention Initiative’ | English | Europe/Belgium | Multi-national | Action Plan | Falls specific |
| 25. | European Stakeholders Alliance for Active Ageing through Falls Prevention (ESA on Falls), EuroSafe Alliance & Prevention of Falls Network for Dissemination (ProFouND) [ | 2015 | Active ageing through preventing falls “Falls prevention is everyone’s business”: Joint Declaration | English | Europe/Netherlands | Multi-national | Position statement | Falls specific |
| 26. | Netherlands Ministry of Health [ | 2020 | National Health Policy 2020–2024 (Landelijke-Nota-Gezondheidsbeleid-LNG-2020–2024) | Abstract in English, Policy doc in Dutch | Netherlands | National | Strategic plan | Multi-issue: Public Health |
| 27. | New Zealand Government, Accident Compensation Corporation (ACC) [ | 2005 | Preventing Injuries from Falls: The National Strategy 2005–2015 | English | New Zealand | National | Strategic plan | Multi-issue: Injury |
| 28. | New Zealand Government, Accident Compensation Corporation (ACC) [ | 2005 | National Injury Prevention Strategy 2004–2014 | English | New Zealand | National | Strategic plan | Multi-issue: Injury |
| 29. | New Zealand Associate Minister of Health [ | 2016 | Healthy Ageing Strategy | English | New Zealand | National | Action Plan | Multi-issue: Healthy Ageing |
| 30. | Singapore Ministry of Health [ | 2018 | I feel young in my Singapore! Action Plan for Successful Ageing | English | Singapore | National | Action Plan | Multi-issue: Healthy Ageing |
| 31. | Public Health England [ | 2017 | Falls and fracture consensus statement: Supporting commissioning for prevention (and resource pack) | English | UK, England | National | Position statement | Falls specific |
| 32. | Health Service Executive & National Council on Ageing and Older People & Department of Health and Children [ | 2008 | Strategy to Prevent Falls and Fractures in Ireland’s Ageing Population | English | UK, Ireland | National | Action Plan | Falls specific |
| 33. | Scottish Government [ | 2014 | The Prevention and Management of Falls in the Community: A Framework for Action in Scotland 2014/2016 | English | UK, Scotland | National | Action Plan | Falls specific |
| 34. | Scottish Government, Chief Nursing Officer’s Directorate [ | 2019 | National Falls and Fracture Prevention Strategy 2019–2024 draft (Consultation version) | English | UK, Scotland | National | Strategic plan | Falls specific |
| 35. | Centers of Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), National Center for Injury Prevention and Control (NCIPC) [ | 2015 | A CDC Compendium of Effective Fall Interventions: What Works for Community-Dwelling Older Adults. 3rd Edition | English | USA | National | Government guideline | Falls specific |
| 36. | Centers of Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) [ | 2015 | Preventing Falls: A guide to implementing effective community-based falls prevention programs. 2nd Edition | English | USA | National | Government guideline | Falls specific |
| 37. | Centers of Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), National Center for Injury Prevention and Control (NCIPC) [ | 2017 | STEADI - Older Adult Falls Prevention: Patient & Caregiver Resources: What you can do to prevent falls | English | USA | National | Government guideline/consumer resource | Falls specific |
| 38. | National Council On Aging (NCOA) [ | 2005 | Falls Free®: Promoting a National Falls Prevention Action Plan 2005 | English | USA | National | Action Plan | Falls specific |
| 39. | National Council on Aging (NCOA), Cameron et al. [ | 2015 | Falls Free®: 2015 National Falls Prevention Action Plan | English | USA | National | Action Plan | Falls specific |
| 40. | National Council on Aging (NCOA), Beattie and Schneider [ | 2012 | State Policy Toolkit for Advancing Falls Prevention | English | USA | National | Government policy document/guideline | Falls specific |
| 41. | National Prevention Council [ | 2011 | National Prevention Strategy: America’s Plan for Better Health and Wellness | English | USA | National | Strategic plan | Multi-Issue: Public Health |
| 42. | National Prevention, Health Promotion & Public Health Council (National Prevention Council) [ | 2016 | Healthy Aging in Action: Advancing the National Prevention Strategy | English | USA | National | Strategic plan | Multi-issue: Healthy Ageing |
| 43. | United States Senate, Special Committee on Aging [ | 2019 | Falls Prevention: National, State, and Local Solutions to Better Support Seniors | English | USA | National | Government policy document | Falls specific |
| 44. | U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, Administration for Community Living (ACL) [ | 2016 | Older Americans Act (OAA) 2016 Reauthorization | English | USA | National | Legislation | Multi-issue: Community Social Services |
| 45. | U.S. Department of Health and Human Services [ | 2010 | Healthy People 2020 | English | USA | National | Strategic plan | Multi-issue: Public Health |
| 46. | U.S. Department of Health and Human Services [ | 2020 | Healthy People 2030 | English | USA | National | Strategic plan | Multi-issue: Public Health |
| 47. | U.S. Congress [ | 2006 | H.R.5608 - Keeping Seniors Safe From Falls Act; and Report on S.1531—Keeping Seniors Safe from Falls and Reauthorization of the Traumatic Brain Injury Act | English | USA | National | Legislation | Falls specific |
Policy content evaluation framework showing aggregate results for selected 25 policy documents, (Melbourne, Australia, 2020–21).
| Content Analysis Framework | Criteria (n = 20) | Criteria Description/key question used by reviewers to score the presence or absence of text in the policy document as Yes (1), No (0) or unclear (0.5) | Proportion of 25 policy documents that met the criteria (*IRR) (and traffic light colour indication 0-49% Red, 50-74% Yellow, 75-100% Green) | Reviewer Observations |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| World Health Organization (WHO) guideline for policy-makers and planners for developing policy to prevent injuries and violence [ | Quantified objectives | W1 - Do objectives include reduction in falls burden by a quantified amount? | 20% | Although ALL policies specified broad aims for falls prevention, only 19% policies included quantified objectives or measurable targets for reduction of injury incidence rates. |
| Time frame | W2 - Is there a clear time frame for the implementation of the policy | 61% | The average time frame for falls prevention specific policies was 3-4 years, compared to general policies that were for an average of 10 years. | |
| Target population | W3 - Is the target population clearly defined? | 80% | Most policies targeted an undefined population of ‘older people’, with some explicitly defining them to be adults over the age of 60 or 65 years. One policy from Ireland targeted those above 75 years of age, and one policy from USA specified adults of 50+ years. | |
| Multisector involvement | W4 - Is there participation of different stakeholders in the policy formulation? | 64% | Stakeholders commonly involved were from the health and aged care sectors. | |
| Planned interventions | W5 - Are there planned interventions that will be implemented in order to achieve the specified objectives? | 77% | Specific falls prevention policies proposed a range of interventions, usually aligned with Cochrane-level evidence for community falls prevention (refs), to multi-faceted, ecological and health system approaches and strategies targeting individual older people, health professionals and community organisations that work with them, and commonly cited prominent government guidelines such as the CDC US Compendium of Effective Falls Interventions (ref). | |
| Broad policies that included community falls prevention in their remit centred around 3 issues: increasing falls prevention knowledge among older people, increasing physical activity opportunities for older people and enhancing falls risk management by clinicians and health professionals working in the community. | ||||
| Lead agency | W6 - Is the public administrative body that is responsible for the development and outcomes of the policy specified? | 76% | In most cases the administrative body of the policy was a Health Ministry, or public health related government agency. For the other 23% of policies, policy development and implementation was implied to be a shared responsibility of diverse agencies and levels of government (e.g. NZ ACC, US NCOA, European Commission, or Europe’s ProFound network). Sometimes, responsibility for implementation was apportioned to a yet-to-be-formed lead agency as one of the aims of the policy (e.g. Australian Injury Prevention Strategy 2020-2030). | |
| Budget | W7 - Is a budget to finance the policy development mentioned or implicit within the policy? | 12% | Few policies stated a specific budget source for the policy development or implementation. Policies with no dedicated budget for policy development, often included a call for resources to be allocated as one of the implementation actions desired by the policy. | |
| Monitoring and evaluation mechanism | W8 - Is there a mechanism already developed or in process for monitoring policy implementation and evaluation of its effectiveness in achieving the specified objectives? | 52% | Only half of the policies nominated an established institution, method or agreed framework ready to be utilised for M&E. The nominated institution for evaluation was usually external to the lead agency responsible for developing or implementing the policy. Typically nominated were process evaluations of policy implementation programs but not evaluations of the overarching policies themselves. Few policies indicated falls-injury outcome evaluation, and two indicated intent to carry out economic evaluation of implementation programs. | |
| Government minister / ministry approval | W9 - Is there formal approval for policy development by government minister/ministry? | 42% | Policies demonstrated formal government approval by including a forward/executive summary signed by a government official, an authorisation signature within the document. | |
| New Zealand Government policy quality framework and checklist for developing policy across government [ | Timing | NZ1 - explains why the policy is timed now? | 84% | Policy timing was usually referred to as a pressing need to tackle the ‘urgent and growing epidemiological falls burden in the community’. Some policies mentioned a government or regulatory requirement for cyclical policy review or iteration development. |
| Alignment with other priorities | NZ2 - explains fit with government priorities or other policies? | 63% | Falls policies often cross-referenced broader public health or preventive health policies, or policies framed as healthy and active ageing. A few policies referenced alignment with transport or road safety policies, acknowledging that many older adults fall in the community on public streets or roads and on public transport. Few policies mentioned housing policies in relation to universal design principles to ensure safe homes and buildings in which older people live. | |
| Rationale and evidence for government intervention | NZ3 - Does evidence support the policy? clear rationale for why government should intervene? | 84% | Most falls prevention policies proposed intervention options consistent with an evidence-informed approach and the public health theoretical framework. Policies usually provided clear epidemiological rationale for why government should intervene. Most of the intervention options proposed were in keeping with an evidence-informed approach. | |
| Clear objectives | NZ4 - Clear policy objectives given? | 79% | Most policies stated broad aims and objectives for falls prevention. | |
| Clear options for intervention | NZ5 - Clear options for interventions/strategies? | 80% | Intervention options were usually numerous in number, variety and not prioritised and not costed. | |
| Target population and diversity | NZ6 - Are indigenous populations used in the analysis? Population diversity considered? | 33% | When policies mentioned population diversity, it usually referred to factors of age, gender, but not cultural diversity or socio-economic diversity or functional diversity of sub-groups most at risk of falls. | |
| Facilitates action | NZ7 - Does it facilitate action for the decision maker? | 65% | Policies usually outlined intervention actions, however few assigned specific actions to specific policy actors or stakeholders. | |
| Stakeholders and consumer consultation | NZ8 - Does it reflect diverse perspectives of stakeholders and public consultation? | 48% | Most policies engaged diverse stakeholders in the policy development, usually limited to health and ageing sectors. Many policies were developed with a public consultation process, but few policies specifically identified consumer engagement with older people themselves. | |
| Risks and mitigations | NZ9 - Does it identify policy risks and mitigations? | 12% | Most policies did not consider possible negative consequences of the policy, or did not identify divergent or opposing stakeholder views or how to deal with them. | |
| Advice for implementation | NZ10 - Does it identify clearly what needs to be implemented, by whom, when, where and why? | 52% | Half the policies did not apportion specific implementation actions to specific stakeholders. Implementation or intervention actions were generally not prioritised. | |
| Monitoring and evaluation method | NZ11 - Is it clear how it will be monitored and evaluated? | 54% | (Similar to W8) Half of the policy documents did not clearly state how monitoring or evaluation would be carried out. Some policy documents included vague intent to ‘evaluate’ or ‘review’ the policy at a later point in time, or intent to collect unspecified “evaluation data”. |
Note * Inter-rater reliability (IRR) scores for the two independent reviewers performing the content evaluation were calculated using Pearson’s r Correlation Coefficient: 0.64 for the WHO criteria (strong relationship) and 0.30 for the NZ criteria (weak relationship).
FIGURE 2Radar charts showing percentage of public policies that met the 20 criteria of the policy content evaluation framework (Melbourne, Australia, 2020–21).
FIGURE 3Summary of 25 public policies meeting 20 criteria in the policy content evaluation framework (Melbourne, Australia, 2020–21).