Patients with recurrent falls attending Accident & Emergency benefit from multifactorial intervention...
Objectives: to determine the effectiveness of multifactorial intervention to prevent falls in cognitively intact older persons with recurrent falls.
Design: randomised controlled trial of multifactorial (medical, physiotherapy and occupational therapy) post-fall assessment and intervention compared with conventional care.
Setting: Accident & Emergency departments in a university teaching hospital and associated district general hospital.
Subjects: 313 cognitively intact men and women aged over 65 years presenting to Accident & Emergency with a fall or fall-related injury and at least one additional fall in the preceding year; 159 randomised to assessment and intervention and 154 to conventional care.
Outcome measures: primary outcome was the number of falls and fallers in 1 year after recruitment. Secondary outcomes included injury rates, fall-related hospital admissions, mortality and fear of falling.
Results: there were 36% fewer falls in the intervention group (relative risk 0.64, 95% confidence interval 0.46–0.90). The proportion of subjects continuing to fall (65% (94/144) compared with 68% (102/149) relative risk 0.95, 95% confidence interval 0.81–1.12), and the number of fall-related attendances and hospital admissions was not different between groups. Duration of hospital admission was reduced (mean difference admission duration 3.6 days, 95% confidence interval 0.1–7.6) and falls efficacy was better in the intervention group (mean difference in Activities Specific Balance Confidence Score of 7.5, 95% confidence interval 0.72–14.2).
Conclusion: multifactorial intervention is effective at reducing the fall burden in cognitively intact older persons with recurrent falls attending Accident & Emergency, but does not reduce the proportion of subjects still falling.
Similar entries
- Community falls prevention for people who call an emergency ambulance after a fall: randomised controlled trial
- The Winchester falls project: a randomised controlled trial of secondary prevention of falls in older people
- Community-based intervention to optimise falls risk management: a randomised controlled trial
- The FIM® instrument to identify patients at risk of falling in geriatric wards: a 10-year retrospective study
- UK community falls prevention service halves falls rate in older people
- Effect on falls of providing single lens distance vision glasses to multifocal glasses wearers
- Multifactorial fall-prevention programmes may not work: Netherlands Research
- 24-hour ambulatory electrocardiographic monitoring is unhelpful in the investigation of older persons with recurrent falls
- A prospective observational study of falling before and after knee replacement surgery
- The FIM® instrument to identify patients at risk of falling in geriatric wards: a 10-year retrospective study





