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Falls in home-dwelling elderly. Mieke Deschodt Center for Health Services and Nursing Sciences Katholiek Universiteit Leuven. Falls incidence. In home-dwelling elderly 28% - 35% of people aged 65 or older fall at least ones a year 32% - 42% of people aged 75 or older
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Falls in home-dwelling elderly Mieke Deschodt Center for Health Services and Nursing Sciences Katholiek Universiteit Leuven
Falls incidence In home-dwelling elderly 28% - 35% of people aged 65 or older fall at least ones a year 32% - 42% of people aged 75 or older 15% - 50% with two or more fall incidents per year (Masud & Morris, Age Ageing 2001; Tinetti, NEJM 2003; Milisen et al., Tijdschr Gerontol Geriatr 2004)
Falls incidence In institutionalized elderly (e.g. nursing home) 30-70% at least one fall incident a year 15-40% with 2 or more fall incidents Average number of falls per bed 1,4 in somatic institutions 2,2 in psychogeriatric institutions (NVKG & CBO richtlijn, 2004)
Impact on the older person • Physical impact (40% - 60%) • Minor injury: 30% - 50% • Bruises, cuts, tissue damage • Major injury: 10% - 15% • Fracture: 5% - 10%; • Hip fracture: 1% - 2%; • Soft tissue injury and head injury: 5% (AGS panel on falls prevention et al., JAGS 2001; Masud & Morris, Age Ageing 2001; Milisen et al., Tijdschr Gerontol Geriatr 2004; Tinetti, NEJM 2003)
Impact on the older person • Psychological impact: • Fear of falling again: 32% - 63% • Loss of self-confidence, loss of independency, social isolation, depression,… causes an increased risk of falling and a longer hospitalisation (AGS panel on falls prevention et al., JAGS 2001; Masud & Morris, Age Ageing 2001; Milisen et al., Tijdschr Gerontol Geriatr 2004; Tinetti, NEJM 2003)
Impact on the older person • Increased risk of mortalilty • Involuntary injury = 5th cause of death in people aged 70 years or older • Fall accidents = most important cause of involuntary injuries • Most important risk factor in older persons with osteoporosis for having a hip fracture • Hip fracture • 20% becomes immobile • only 14% - 21% regains full ADL-independency • 25% - 33% mortality risk in the first year (AGS panel on falls prevention et al., JAGS 2001; Masud & Morris, Age Ageing 2001; NVKG richtlijn & CBO, 2004)
Financial consequences • Increases use of sources • Institutionalisation = 3 x more ofter in fallers • Hospital admission as a result of falling increases 6 times from the age of 65 • Fall injury = most expensive category of all traumata in elderly (Englander et al., J Forensic Sciences 1996; Masud & Morris, Age Ageing 2001)
(Kneuzing, schaafwonde, …) €10.528 Increased age and institutionalisation before the fracture are the most important decisive factors for the additional cost (Haentjens et al. Disabil Rehabil 2005)
Falls Fall incident = result of a combination of Intrinsic risk factors Extrinsic risk factors Multifactorial problem multidisciplinary solution
Effectivity • Multifactorial evaluation followed by multifactorial interventions targeting on identified risk factors • In older persons with increased risk • = most effective • 25% to 39% reduction of fall incidents • Little/no proven effect on incidence of severe injuries • the risk profile of the older person has no influence on the effectivity • cave older persons with severe cognitive problems (e.g. dementia) • (Gillespie et al., Cochrane 2003; Tinetti, NEJM 2003; Chang et al., BMJ 2004; Kannus et al., Lancet 2005)
Inability to get up after a fall incident • 1 year follow-up of 90 women en 20 men (90+) at home and in an institution • 60% fell at least 1x/year • 82% of falls occured when the person was alone • 80% were unable to get up without help • > 95% has a personal alarm system, +/- 80% does not use the alarm system • 30% had lain on the floor for an hour or more • Pressure ulcers, dehydration, hypothermia, pneumonia, hospital admission, moving into long term care, death • Older persons need training in strategies to get up from the floor after a fall incident (Fleming et al. BMJ 2008)
Inability to get up after a fall incident • Cognitive impairment is the only characteristic that predicted lying on the floor for a long time • Need for developing an automatic fall detection system that is not depending on the (cognitive) capacities of the older person • (Fleming et al. BMJ 2008) • Building and validating a camera system for fall detection in home-dwelling elderly
Camera system • Alarm can be generated independently • No action needed of the person in contrast to the personal alarm system • In cases where the person is not fully conscious after the fall, there will still be an alarm • Because of the alarm a care provider can quickly come to help • Preventing that the faller lies on the floor for a long time • The system can reduce the fear of falling and enables for older people to live longer independently at home.
Camera system • Unlike accelerometers, gyroscopes, or alarm buttons, a camera system is fully contactless • elderly people do not have to take along or wear the alarm button and so they can't forget it • The system is not battery-operated • After a fall incident the circumstances can be studied carefully with the camera images, so that preventive steps could be taken to prevent similar falls