A critical review of the effectiveness of environmental assessment and modification in the prevention of falls amongst community dwelling older people
A critical review of the effectiveness of environmental assessment and modification in the prevention of falls amongst community dwelling older people
Introduction: The potential of environmental assessment and modification to reduce falls has recently received attention within the gerontology literature. Research investigating the clinical effectiveness of this intervention in falls prevention reports conflicting results. Discrepancies are due to variation in the risk profile of study participants and the health care background of the person providing the environmental intervention or the intensity of the intervention provided.
Method: The purpose of this paper is to compare and contrast two systematic reviews, which include meta-analyses, of environmental interventions for falls prevention in community dwelling older people, using the critical appraisal skills programme tool for systematic reviews. Findings: Both reviews found that: environmental assessment and modification was effective in falls prevention; intervention was effective with high but not low risk participants; and that high intensity environmental assessment was effective, whereas low intensity intervention was not. Environmental interventions which were delivered by occupational therapists were deemed high intensity, probably because their underpinning theoretical frameworks focus on the impact of the environment on function.
Conclusion: We discuss possible reasons why occupational therapist led environmental assessment and modification is clinically effective in falls prevention, for people at high risk of falls, whereas non occupational therapist led intervention is not.
environmental assessment, accidental falls, older people, home assessment
1-12
Pighills, A.
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Ballinger, C.
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Pickering, R.
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Chari, S.
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Pighills, A.
1242111d-1d72-41a2-883b-89a26d1ccf72
Ballinger, C.
1495742c-90aa-4074-920e-95e6cc3d5380
Pickering, R.
4a828314-7ddf-4f96-abed-3407017d4c90
Chari, S.
746c4ff4-bf3c-4140-9fcd-261b25655185
Pighills, A., Ballinger, C., Pickering, R. and Chari, S.
(2015)
A critical review of the effectiveness of environmental assessment and modification in the prevention of falls amongst community dwelling older people.
The British Journal of Occupational Therapy, .
(doi:10.1177/0308022615600181).
Abstract
Introduction: The potential of environmental assessment and modification to reduce falls has recently received attention within the gerontology literature. Research investigating the clinical effectiveness of this intervention in falls prevention reports conflicting results. Discrepancies are due to variation in the risk profile of study participants and the health care background of the person providing the environmental intervention or the intensity of the intervention provided.
Method: The purpose of this paper is to compare and contrast two systematic reviews, which include meta-analyses, of environmental interventions for falls prevention in community dwelling older people, using the critical appraisal skills programme tool for systematic reviews. Findings: Both reviews found that: environmental assessment and modification was effective in falls prevention; intervention was effective with high but not low risk participants; and that high intensity environmental assessment was effective, whereas low intensity intervention was not. Environmental interventions which were delivered by occupational therapists were deemed high intensity, probably because their underpinning theoretical frameworks focus on the impact of the environment on function.
Conclusion: We discuss possible reasons why occupational therapist led environmental assessment and modification is clinically effective in falls prevention, for people at high risk of falls, whereas non occupational therapist led intervention is not.
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Accepted/In Press date: 23 June 2015
e-pub ahead of print date: 2 November 2015
Keywords:
environmental assessment, accidental falls, older people, home assessment
Organisations:
Faculty of Health Sciences
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 387080
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/387080
ISSN: 0308-0226
PURE UUID: ccb60f0d-afbb-4813-9812-a44e8bb74838
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Date deposited: 09 Feb 2016 10:23
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 22:42
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Author:
A. Pighills
Author:
C. Ballinger
Author:
S. Chari
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