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Journal Article

Citation

Wagner LM, Phillips VL, Hunsaker AE, Forducey PG. BMC Geriatr. 2009; 9(1): 46.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2009, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group - BMC)

DOI

10.1186/1471-2318-9-46

PMID

19828029

PMCID

PMC2771071

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Stroke victims are at relatively high risk for injurious falls. The purpose of this study was to document longitudinal fall patterns following inpatient rehabilitation for first-time stroke survivors. METHODS: Participants (n=231) were recruited at the end of their rehab stay and interviewed monthly via telephone for 1 to 32 months regarding fall incidents. Analyses were conducted on: total reports of falls by month over time for first-time and repeat fallers; the incidence of falling in any given month; and factors differing between fallers and non fallers. RESULTS: The largest percentage of participants (14%) reported falling in the first month post-discharge. After month five, less than 10% of the sample reported falling, bar months 15 (10.4%) and 23 (13.2%). From months one to nine, the percentage of those reporting one fall with and without a prior fall were similar. After month nine, those reporting a single fall with a fall history was twice as high compared to those,without a prior fall, who reported falling. In both cases the percentages were small. A very small subset of the population emerged who fell multiple times each month; most of whom had a prior fall history. At least a third of the sample reported a loss of balance each month. Few factors differed significantly between fallers and non-fallers in months one to six. CONCLUSIONS: Longitudinal data suggest that falls most likely linked to first time strokes occur in the first six months post discharge, particularly month one. Data routinely available at discharge does not distinguish fallers from non-fallers. Once a fall incident has occurred, however, preventive intervention is warranted.


Language: en

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