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Consensus-based clinical practice recommendations for the examination and management of falls in patients with Parkinson's disease

Consensus-based clinical practice recommendations for the examination and management of falls in patients with Parkinson's disease
Consensus-based clinical practice recommendations for the examination and management of falls in patients with Parkinson's disease
Falls in Parkinson's disease (PD) are common and frequently devastating. Falls prevention is an urgent priority, but there is no accepted program that specifically addresses the risk profile in PD. Therefore, we aimed to provide consensus-based clinical practice recommendations that systematically address potential fall risk factors in PD. We developed an overview of both generic (age-related) and PD-specific factors. For each factor, we specified: best method of ascertainment; disciplines that should be involved in assessment and treatment; and which interventions could be engaged. Using a web-based tool, we asked 27 clinically active professionals from multiple relevant disciplines to evaluate this overview. The revised version was subsequently reviewed by 12 experts. Risk factors and their associated interventions were included in the final set of recommendations when at least 66% of reviewing experts agreed. These recommendations included 31 risk factors. Nearly all required a multidisciplinary team approach, usually involving a neurologist and PD-nurse specialist. Finally, the expert panel proposed to first identify the specific fall type and to tailor screening and treatment accordingly. A routine evaluation of all risk factors remains reserved for high-risk patients without prior falls, or for patients with seemingly unexplained falls. In conclusion, this project produced a set of consensus-based clinical practice recommendations for the examination and management of falls in PD. These may be used in two ways: for pragmatic use in current clinical practice, pending further evidence; and as the active intervention in clinical trials, aiming to evaluate the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of large scale implementation
1353-8020
360-369
van der Marck, Marjolein A.
d12c992f-e873-405a-95d4-662087671f66
Klok, Margit Ph.C.
78e0400c-9d62-4274-adf7-0aae668d6b56
Okun, Michael S.
07001a73-690e-417f-9f0f-93e112ce8508
Giladi, Nir
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Munneke, Marten
e86bca42-50e5-4793-8f4b-7b70d8ca6877
Bloem, Bastiaan R.
f7dae676-55ef-4ed1-af54-28add016c371
Ballinger, Claire
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van der Marck, Marjolein A.
d12c992f-e873-405a-95d4-662087671f66
Klok, Margit Ph.C.
78e0400c-9d62-4274-adf7-0aae668d6b56
Okun, Michael S.
07001a73-690e-417f-9f0f-93e112ce8508
Giladi, Nir
4676ce3e-f21d-481f-a281-428e0ac1fa2b
Munneke, Marten
e86bca42-50e5-4793-8f4b-7b70d8ca6877
Bloem, Bastiaan R.
f7dae676-55ef-4ed1-af54-28add016c371
Ballinger, Claire
1495742c-90aa-4074-920e-95e6cc3d5380

van der Marck, Marjolein A., Klok, Margit Ph.C., Okun, Michael S., Giladi, Nir, Munneke, Marten, Bloem, Bastiaan R. and Ballinger, Claire (2014) Consensus-based clinical practice recommendations for the examination and management of falls in patients with Parkinson's disease. Parkinsonism and Related Disorders, 20 (4), 360-369. (doi:10.1016/j.parkreldis.2013.10.030). (PMID:24484618)

Record type: Article

Abstract

Falls in Parkinson's disease (PD) are common and frequently devastating. Falls prevention is an urgent priority, but there is no accepted program that specifically addresses the risk profile in PD. Therefore, we aimed to provide consensus-based clinical practice recommendations that systematically address potential fall risk factors in PD. We developed an overview of both generic (age-related) and PD-specific factors. For each factor, we specified: best method of ascertainment; disciplines that should be involved in assessment and treatment; and which interventions could be engaged. Using a web-based tool, we asked 27 clinically active professionals from multiple relevant disciplines to evaluate this overview. The revised version was subsequently reviewed by 12 experts. Risk factors and their associated interventions were included in the final set of recommendations when at least 66% of reviewing experts agreed. These recommendations included 31 risk factors. Nearly all required a multidisciplinary team approach, usually involving a neurologist and PD-nurse specialist. Finally, the expert panel proposed to first identify the specific fall type and to tailor screening and treatment accordingly. A routine evaluation of all risk factors remains reserved for high-risk patients without prior falls, or for patients with seemingly unexplained falls. In conclusion, this project produced a set of consensus-based clinical practice recommendations for the examination and management of falls in PD. These may be used in two ways: for pragmatic use in current clinical practice, pending further evidence; and as the active intervention in clinical trials, aiming to evaluate the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of large scale implementation

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Accepted/In Press date: 2 October 2014
Published date: 2014
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

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Local EPrints ID: 380525
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/380525
ISSN: 1353-8020
PURE UUID: f4bf2018-3d29-47c4-a616-0ea3b44b6d8c

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Date deposited: 11 Sep 2015 13:09
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 21:00

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Contributors

Author: Marjolein A. van der Marck
Author: Margit Ph.C. Klok
Author: Michael S. Okun
Author: Nir Giladi
Author: Marten Munneke
Author: Bastiaan R. Bloem
Author: Claire Ballinger

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