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Characteristics of early fallers on elderly patient rehabilitation wards

Characteristics of early fallers on elderly patient rehabilitation wards
Characteristics of early fallers on elderly patient rehabilitation wards
Background: falls are one of the most frequent complications on rehabilitation wards for elderly patients.
Objective: to study the characteristics of early and late fallers.
Design: prospective observational study with blinded end-point evaluation.
Setting: a non-acute geriatric hospital.
Subjects: 1025 consecutive patients admitted for rehabilitation following treatment for an acute illness.
Main outcome measures: early/late fallers and time to first fall from admission.
Results: we identified 824 non-fallers and 201 fallers. Seventy seven (38.3%) fell during the first week. The incidence decreased progressively in subsequent weeks. Early fallers were more likely to have a past history of falls (P=0.0009), an unsafe gait (P=0.001), confusion (P<0.0001) and be admitted from medical wards (P=0.03). Patients admitted from orthopaedic wards having sustained a lower limb fracture were significantly less likely to have an early fall compared to all other patients (P=0.027). When compared to later fallers, early fallers were more likely to have a past history of falls (P=0.045). They were less likely to be admitted from an orthopaedic ward (P=0.01) or to have sustained a fracture of the lower limbs (P=0.002). Logistic regression analysis showed that a past history of falls, confusion and an unsafe gait were independent risk factors predisposing to early falls. The Kaplan-Meier survival analysis showed a significantly higher cumulative risk of falling associated with these characteristics.
Conclusion: the initial week of patients' rehabilitation is associated with the greatest risk of falling. Early fallers can be predicted by easily identifiable characteristics. This highlights the need for early fall risk assessment.
falls, elderly, rehabilitation, hospital
0002-0729
338-342
Vassallo, M.
15d899f4-f6a5-42d7-8093-bd2c4565b561
Sharma, J. C.
c4a0cee5-2303-4a82-af10-884fd4a32919
Briggs, R. S.
a6b65ef0-e90c-4c07-bf5b-b70130c128b3
Allen, S. C.
70bcdcd4-9637-43fe-a907-826a35dcf738
Vassallo, M.
15d899f4-f6a5-42d7-8093-bd2c4565b561
Sharma, J. C.
c4a0cee5-2303-4a82-af10-884fd4a32919
Briggs, R. S.
a6b65ef0-e90c-4c07-bf5b-b70130c128b3
Allen, S. C.
70bcdcd4-9637-43fe-a907-826a35dcf738

Vassallo, M., Sharma, J. C., Briggs, R. S. and Allen, S. C. (2003) Characteristics of early fallers on elderly patient rehabilitation wards. Age and Ageing, 32 (3), 338-342. (doi:10.1093/ageing/32.3.338).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: falls are one of the most frequent complications on rehabilitation wards for elderly patients.
Objective: to study the characteristics of early and late fallers.
Design: prospective observational study with blinded end-point evaluation.
Setting: a non-acute geriatric hospital.
Subjects: 1025 consecutive patients admitted for rehabilitation following treatment for an acute illness.
Main outcome measures: early/late fallers and time to first fall from admission.
Results: we identified 824 non-fallers and 201 fallers. Seventy seven (38.3%) fell during the first week. The incidence decreased progressively in subsequent weeks. Early fallers were more likely to have a past history of falls (P=0.0009), an unsafe gait (P=0.001), confusion (P<0.0001) and be admitted from medical wards (P=0.03). Patients admitted from orthopaedic wards having sustained a lower limb fracture were significantly less likely to have an early fall compared to all other patients (P=0.027). When compared to later fallers, early fallers were more likely to have a past history of falls (P=0.045). They were less likely to be admitted from an orthopaedic ward (P=0.01) or to have sustained a fracture of the lower limbs (P=0.002). Logistic regression analysis showed that a past history of falls, confusion and an unsafe gait were independent risk factors predisposing to early falls. The Kaplan-Meier survival analysis showed a significantly higher cumulative risk of falling associated with these characteristics.
Conclusion: the initial week of patients' rehabilitation is associated with the greatest risk of falling. Early fallers can be predicted by easily identifiable characteristics. This highlights the need for early fall risk assessment.

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More information

Published date: 1 May 2003
Additional Information: Vassalo, M., Sharma, J. C., Briggs, R. S., and Allen, S. C.
Keywords: falls, elderly, rehabilitation, hospital

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 37815
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/37815
ISSN: 0002-0729
PURE UUID: 178aa6ea-1cfc-41af-a63e-42ae8d82eaa2

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 26 May 2006
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 08:01

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Contributors

Author: M. Vassallo
Author: J. C. Sharma
Author: R. S. Briggs
Author: S. C. Allen

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