1 / 9

Falls in Nursing Homes

Falls in Nursing Homes. Mark L. Shiu March 12, 1999 UCLA School of Public Health Epidemiology 247. Definition/Classification. Falling down spontaneously and unintentionally when walking, or tripping, slipping, or losing balance after being pushed or shoved.

tamra
Télécharger la présentation

Falls in Nursing Homes

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Falls in Nursing Homes Mark L. Shiu March 12, 1999 UCLA School of Public Health Epidemiology 247

  2. Definition/Classification • Falling down spontaneously and unintentionally when walking, or tripping, slipping, or losing balance after being pushed or shoved. • Falls may occur when transferring from a bed, chair, or toilet.

  3. Magnitude of Problem - General • Incidence of falls and complications in older people increases with age and physical disability. • Accidents are 5th leading cause of death in older adults • Falls are responsible for 2/3 of these accidental deaths • ¾ of these deaths are caused by falls which occur in 13% of the population 65 + • 1/3 of elderly living at home will fall each year and 5% will sustain a fracture requiring hospitalization.

  4. Magnitude of Problem - Nursing Homes • Fall incidence rate in institutionalized elderly is 3x the rate in community living elderly. This is due to the frail nature of the patients and more accurate reporting of falls in institutions. • Most falls take place in bedroom or bathroom. • Most falls likely to occur during staff shift changes and times of increased activity.

  5. Consequences of Falls • Fractures and injuries • Studies suggest 1 to 5% of falls result in fracture • 5 to 10% in severe soft tissue injuries • Nursing home residents have a higher incidence of hip fractures and mortality rates from fractures than compared with non-institutionalized elderly • Deaths • 1,800 fatal falls occur in nursing homes • 1 of 5 fatal falls will occur in nursing homes • Once injured, an elderly person who has fallen has a higher case fatality than younger fallers • Loss of confidence/Fear of reoccurrence

  6. Risk Factors for Falls • Multi-factorial nature of falls, often difficult to pinpoint one specific cause. • Major risk factors for falls in Nursing Homes • Intrinsic factors • Age • Gender • Physical/Mental/Physiological disorders • Medication/chronic condition interactions • Number of previous falls • External or Environmental • Mechanical restraints • Accident or environmental related • Falls of non institutionalized persons are more related to environment.

  7. Prevention • Due to multi factorial nature of fall, no single standard approach to prevention. • Must develop individualized plans for each patient. • Considerations • Patients overall condition • Risk factors • Quality of life

  8. Prevention (cont’d) • Specific Intervention • Medical • Rehabilitative • Behavioral • Institutional Intervention • Environmental Assessment • Nursing/Staff Education • Technology

  9. Conclusion • Although further studies need to be conducted to evaluate the effectiveness of these interventions… • In the meantime, we should implement these simple intervention strategies since they have proven effective in different cases. • Example • Success of the Multidisciplinary Falls Consultation Service • Falls consultation team developed in November 1986 at The Jewish Home and Hospital for Aged (JHHA), (Mount Sinai School of Medicine, Dept Geriatrics and Adult Development, N.Y.).

More Related