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Journal Article

Citation

Flabeau O, Laurendeau G, Laksir H, Castaings-Pelet S, Harston S, Bourdel-Marchasson I. J. Nutr. Health Aging 2013; 17(2): 199-204.

Affiliation

I. Bourdel-Marchasson, Department of Gerontology, University Hospital Bordeaux, Avenue du Haut Lévêque, 33604 Pessac cedex, France. Phone: +33 5 57 65 65 71, Fax +33 5 57 65 63 13; e-mail: isabelle.bourdel-marchasson@chu-bordeaux.fr.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2013, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1007/s12603-012-0416-2

PMID

23364503

Abstract

Background: Multidisciplinary interventions for fallers have provided conflicting results in part due to the diversity of fallers' profiles. Objectives: to determine the characteristics of the subgroup of patients with a positive response to a multidisciplinary fall prevention program initiated in a geriatric day hospital. Design: Prospective observational study in day hospital. Methods: Patients > 75 years referred for falls during the last 3 months benefited from a multidisciplinary assessment to record their characteristics at baseline and to tailor a risk-based multidisciplinary intervention for fall prevention. Patients free from falls at the 3rd or 6th month were compared to persistent fallers for baseline characteristics. Results: Sixty-nine patients were assessed at baseline (mean age 85.2 y (SD=0.6)), 44 at the 3rd month and 21 at the 6th month. Baseline characteristics of the patients free from falls at the 3rd month were the lower number of previous non-serious falls (p=0.013), living in nursing home (p=0.045), a higher Berg balance score (p=0.02) and a better mental health-related quality of life (M HQol, p=0.045). On multivariate analysis restricted to home-dwelling patients, the positive predictive factors were less isolation at home (OR=0.028, 95%CI [0-0.813], p=0.037), a lower number of non-serious previous falls (OR= 0.526 [0.309- 0.894], p=0.018), a better M HQol (OR=1.205 [1.000-1.452], p=0.050) and a trend for younger age (OR= 0.662, [0.426-1.027], p=0.066). Conclusion: Being able to call upon a support person (familial or institutional) to apply advice and a less serious risk of falling may be preliminary conditions for success in a multidisciplinary intervention initiated in a day hospital.


Language: en

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