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Multifactorial day hospital intervention to reduce falls in high risk older people in primary care: a multi-centre randomised controlled trial [ISRCTN46584556]

Multifactorial day hospital intervention to reduce falls in high risk older people in primary care: a multi-centre randomised controlled trial [ISRCTN46584556]
Multifactorial day hospital intervention to reduce falls in high risk older people in primary care: a multi-centre randomised controlled trial [ISRCTN46584556]

Falls in older people are a major public health concern in terms of morbidity, mortality and cost. Previous studies suggest that multifactorial interventions can reduce falls, and many geriatric day hospitals are now offering falls intervention programmes. However, no studies have investigated whether these programmes, based in the day hospital are effective, nor whether they can be successfully applied to high-risk older people screened in primary care. The hypothesis is that a multidisciplinary falls assessment and intervention at Day hospitals can reduce the incidence of falls in older people identified within primary care as being at high risk of falling. This will be tested by a pragmatic parallel-group randomised controlled trial in which the participants, identified as at high risk of falling, will be randomised into either the intervention Day hospital arm or to a control (current practice) arm. Those participants preferring not to enter the full randomised study will be offered the opportunity to complete brief diaries only at monthly intervals. This data will be used to validate the screening questionnaire. Three day hospitals (2 Nottingham, 1 Derby) will provide the interventions, and the University of Nottingham's Departments of Primary Care, the Division of Rehabilitation and Ageing Unit, and the Trent Institute for Health Service Research will provide the methodological and statistical expertise. Four hundred subjects will be randomised into the two arms. The primary outcome measure will be the rate of falls over one year. Secondary outcome measures will include the proportion of people experiencing at least one fall, the proportion of people experiencing recurrent falls (>1), injuries, fear of falling, quality of life, institutionalisation rates, and use of health services. Cost-effectiveness analyses will be performed to inform health commissioners about resource allocation issues. The importance of this trial is that the results may be applicable to any UK day hospital setting. SITES: General practices across Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire. Day hospitals:Derbyshire Royal Infirmary (Southern Derbyshire Acute Hospitals NHS Trust)Sherwood Day Service (Nottingham City Hospital Trust)Leengate Day Hospital (Queen's Medical Centre Nottingham University Hospital NHS Trust).

1745-6215
Masud, Tahir
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Coupland, Carol
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Drummond, Avril
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Gladman, John
89788999-01d4-4bd1-adb0-d96b68f2f270
Kendrick, Denise
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Sach, Tracey
5c09256f-ebed-4d14-853a-181f6c92d6f2
Harwood, Rowan
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Kumar, Pradeep
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Morris, Rob
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Taylor, Rachael
bb7300b1-1203-4007-9a54-0c9b683526ac
Youde, Jane
f34b2a56-9075-44e5-8151-0594e4ea4c72
Conroy, Simon
1a33aa87-25a8-4083-8418-b7d73eb99110
Masud, Tahir
ef1fc17c-f133-4635-82bb-547b58521ceb
Coupland, Carol
5d123e7a-f406-4d6b-a09d-2e019de3686f
Drummond, Avril
559a0644-290a-4fcf-9781-0174f2553a8d
Gladman, John
89788999-01d4-4bd1-adb0-d96b68f2f270
Kendrick, Denise
33ad9db9-6d98-4e87-a2ad-323b289e3a16
Sach, Tracey
5c09256f-ebed-4d14-853a-181f6c92d6f2
Harwood, Rowan
0e20cadd-5d43-48e0-9d3b-32c75d37073a
Kumar, Pradeep
0e9dd5e4-f5f1-4f62-b6d9-f1164eb93799
Morris, Rob
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Taylor, Rachael
bb7300b1-1203-4007-9a54-0c9b683526ac
Youde, Jane
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Conroy, Simon
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Masud, Tahir, Coupland, Carol, Drummond, Avril, Gladman, John, Kendrick, Denise, Sach, Tracey, Harwood, Rowan, Kumar, Pradeep, Morris, Rob, Taylor, Rachael, Youde, Jane and Conroy, Simon (2006) Multifactorial day hospital intervention to reduce falls in high risk older people in primary care: a multi-centre randomised controlled trial [ISRCTN46584556]. Trials, 7, [5]. (doi:10.1186/1745-6215-7-5).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Falls in older people are a major public health concern in terms of morbidity, mortality and cost. Previous studies suggest that multifactorial interventions can reduce falls, and many geriatric day hospitals are now offering falls intervention programmes. However, no studies have investigated whether these programmes, based in the day hospital are effective, nor whether they can be successfully applied to high-risk older people screened in primary care. The hypothesis is that a multidisciplinary falls assessment and intervention at Day hospitals can reduce the incidence of falls in older people identified within primary care as being at high risk of falling. This will be tested by a pragmatic parallel-group randomised controlled trial in which the participants, identified as at high risk of falling, will be randomised into either the intervention Day hospital arm or to a control (current practice) arm. Those participants preferring not to enter the full randomised study will be offered the opportunity to complete brief diaries only at monthly intervals. This data will be used to validate the screening questionnaire. Three day hospitals (2 Nottingham, 1 Derby) will provide the interventions, and the University of Nottingham's Departments of Primary Care, the Division of Rehabilitation and Ageing Unit, and the Trent Institute for Health Service Research will provide the methodological and statistical expertise. Four hundred subjects will be randomised into the two arms. The primary outcome measure will be the rate of falls over one year. Secondary outcome measures will include the proportion of people experiencing at least one fall, the proportion of people experiencing recurrent falls (>1), injuries, fear of falling, quality of life, institutionalisation rates, and use of health services. Cost-effectiveness analyses will be performed to inform health commissioners about resource allocation issues. The importance of this trial is that the results may be applicable to any UK day hospital setting. SITES: General practices across Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire. Day hospitals:Derbyshire Royal Infirmary (Southern Derbyshire Acute Hospitals NHS Trust)Sherwood Day Service (Nottingham City Hospital Trust)Leengate Day Hospital (Queen's Medical Centre Nottingham University Hospital NHS Trust).

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1745-6215-7-5 - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 27 February 2006
e-pub ahead of print date: 27 February 2006

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 478161
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/478161
ISSN: 1745-6215
PURE UUID: 4d7e3ec9-32ab-40df-8ce2-cce82a1ebe3f
ORCID for Tracey Sach: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-8098-9220

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Date deposited: 23 Jun 2023 16:37
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:19

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Contributors

Author: Tahir Masud
Author: Carol Coupland
Author: Avril Drummond
Author: John Gladman
Author: Denise Kendrick
Author: Tracey Sach ORCID iD
Author: Rowan Harwood
Author: Pradeep Kumar
Author: Rob Morris
Author: Rachael Taylor
Author: Jane Youde
Author: Simon Conroy

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