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Journal Article

Citation

Carlsson G, Nilsson MH, Ekstam L, Chiatti C, Malmgren Fänge A. Healthcare (Basel) 2017; 5(4): e5040066.

Affiliation

Department of Health Sciences, Lund University, Box 157, SE-221 00 Lund, Sweden. agneta.malmgren_fange@med.lu.se.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, MDPI: Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute)

DOI

10.3390/healthcare5040066

PMID

28961158

Abstract

While health might deteriorate through the ageing and disablement process, the impacts of disability can be reduced by adapting the environment. This study aimed to investigate the effects of applying a standardized research-based strategy to housing adaptation as compared to ordinary practice with respect to falls and fear of falling. Another aim was to investigate the overall effects of housing adaptations on fall-related outcomes over time. In total, 196 clients were included at baseline, with follow-up at 3 and 6 months after the housing adaptation was implemented. The only significant difference between the two approaches was identified with respect to fear of falling at 3 months after the housing adaptation, but not after 6 months. The number of clients reporting actual falls increased over time in both sites, whereas the number of reported near-falls decreased most in the intervention site, but without significant differences. Thus, the patterns of differences between the sites are inconsistent, as are the patterns of change in fall-related outcomes. An overall conclusion is that if the goal is to improve fall-related outcomes, housing adaptation should be complemented with other interventions preventing falls and explicitly address the clients' activity limitations. In addition, longer follow-up times are necessary.


Language: en

Keywords

active ageing; controlled trial; disability; frailty; home modification; intervention

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