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The profile and follow-up of patients who attend the Emergency Department following a fall

The profile and follow-up of patients who attend the Emergency Department following a fall
The profile and follow-up of patients who attend the Emergency Department following a fall
Falls in the older population are associated with increased morbidity and mortality especially in the absence of risk reduction measures. The study aims were to compare the characteristics of older people who present to the Emergency Department (ED) following a fall with the general older ED population and examine referral patterns following ED discharge.

Face-to-face interviews were carried out with 306 people aged 65 years or older. Data was collected on demographic, socio-economic, health and social support factors. Descriptive and inferential statistics (Pearson chi-square test or independent t-test) were used to compare the falls and non-falls group.

Falls occurred in 17% (53/306) of the study population and 43% sustained an injury requiring medical intervention. Patients in the falls group were significantly more likely to be female (68%), older (79 years (SD 6.6)) and living alone (59%). The physical and mental health profile of the falls and non-falls group was similar with 30–40% of people in both groups experiencing moderate to severe physical health impairment. A third of the falls group was discharged from the ED without evidence of referrals.

Conclusion: The older population that present to the ED following a fall requires comprehensive risk factor assessment especially physical function and referrals that include falls prevention. Implications for staff: ED staff need to examine current practice within their ED in relation to falls assessment, management and referral pathways.
older people, falls, emergency department, characteristics
1755-599X
243-250
Naughton, Corina
0885cf4c-a52f-4850-9ad1-bac6aa819143
Mcgrath, Eimear
dd9a78e4-4ad7-4083-8bde-6a2807fb6674
Drennan, Jonathan
dad7b3ad-8b7d-428b-8dea-ccb1d50819eb
Johnson, Felicity
e5f32c59-a280-4b1a-b607-a962ec198e13
Lyons, Imogen
0fb39a27-b42e-48a1-9a54-dee53b0c94a9
Treacy, Pearl
c6e76ade-4c97-4e94-b3ec-812ac3591dbc
Fealy, Gerard
cb7c58ba-c188-4d06-b5a0-7be5e4ab1d7b
Butler, Michelle
e62c8dd8-e40f-48f3-9f7a-1cf7866e9f62
Naughton, Corina
0885cf4c-a52f-4850-9ad1-bac6aa819143
Mcgrath, Eimear
dd9a78e4-4ad7-4083-8bde-6a2807fb6674
Drennan, Jonathan
dad7b3ad-8b7d-428b-8dea-ccb1d50819eb
Johnson, Felicity
e5f32c59-a280-4b1a-b607-a962ec198e13
Lyons, Imogen
0fb39a27-b42e-48a1-9a54-dee53b0c94a9
Treacy, Pearl
c6e76ade-4c97-4e94-b3ec-812ac3591dbc
Fealy, Gerard
cb7c58ba-c188-4d06-b5a0-7be5e4ab1d7b
Butler, Michelle
e62c8dd8-e40f-48f3-9f7a-1cf7866e9f62

Naughton, Corina, Mcgrath, Eimear, Drennan, Jonathan, Johnson, Felicity, Lyons, Imogen, Treacy, Pearl, Fealy, Gerard and Butler, Michelle (2012) The profile and follow-up of patients who attend the Emergency Department following a fall. [in special issue: Aged Care] International Emergency Nursing, 20 (4), 243-250. (doi:10.1016/j.ienj.2011.07.005). (PMID:23084513)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Falls in the older population are associated with increased morbidity and mortality especially in the absence of risk reduction measures. The study aims were to compare the characteristics of older people who present to the Emergency Department (ED) following a fall with the general older ED population and examine referral patterns following ED discharge.

Face-to-face interviews were carried out with 306 people aged 65 years or older. Data was collected on demographic, socio-economic, health and social support factors. Descriptive and inferential statistics (Pearson chi-square test or independent t-test) were used to compare the falls and non-falls group.

Falls occurred in 17% (53/306) of the study population and 43% sustained an injury requiring medical intervention. Patients in the falls group were significantly more likely to be female (68%), older (79 years (SD 6.6)) and living alone (59%). The physical and mental health profile of the falls and non-falls group was similar with 30–40% of people in both groups experiencing moderate to severe physical health impairment. A third of the falls group was discharged from the ED without evidence of referrals.

Conclusion: The older population that present to the ED following a fall requires comprehensive risk factor assessment especially physical function and referrals that include falls prevention. Implications for staff: ED staff need to examine current practice within their ED in relation to falls assessment, management and referral pathways.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 22 August 2011
Published date: October 2012
Keywords: older people, falls, emergency department, characteristics
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 358478
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/358478
ISSN: 1755-599X
PURE UUID: 877a02fa-3c3a-4784-bcda-c62659ad6281
ORCID for Jonathan Drennan: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7365-4345

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Date deposited: 07 Oct 2013 16:10
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:49

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Contributors

Author: Corina Naughton
Author: Eimear Mcgrath
Author: Felicity Johnson
Author: Imogen Lyons
Author: Pearl Treacy
Author: Gerard Fealy
Author: Michelle Butler

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