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Journal Article

Citation

Härlein J, Dassen TWN, Halfens RJ, Heinze C. J. Adv. Nurs. 2009; 65(5): 922-933.

Affiliation

School of Nursing, General Hospital Furth, Germany.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2009, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/j.1365-2648.2008.04950.x

PMID

19291191

Abstract

Aim. This paper is a report of a review conducted to identify and summarize specific risk factors for falls in older people with dementia or cognitive impairments as documented by prospective or case-control studies. Background. People with dementia have a doubled to threefold risk for falls, but the reasons for this have not yet been fully explained. Several integrative literature reviews discuss possible specific fall risk factors. However, there is lack of a systematic evaluation of studies. Data sources. The CINAHL, PubMed, EMBASE and PsychInfo databases were searched for the period between 1980 and May 2007. Review methods. A systematic review was conducted. Cohort or case-control studies published in English or German were included if they investigated risk factors for falls or fall-related injuries in a sample consisting of participants with dementia or cognitive impairment. Two reviewers independently assessed study quality. Results. Six prospective studies were included in the review. These differed concerning samples, settings, follow-up periods and examined variables. Therefore, meta-analysis was not possible. Eight categories of risk factors emerged: disease-specific motor impairments, impaired vision, type and severity of dementia, behavioural disturbances, functional impairments, fall history, neuroleptics and low bone mineral density. Conclusion. There is lack of sound studies examining fall risk factors in cognitively impaired elders. Well-known risk factors such as motor impairment show particular characteristics in people with dementia. In addition, behavioural disturbances contribute to their high risk for falls. Further prospective studies are needed.


Language: en

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