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Journal Article

Citation

van Schooten KS, Yang Y, Feldman F, Leung M, McKay H, Sims-Gould J, Robinovitch SN. J. Gerontol. A Biol. Sci. Med. Sci. 2018; 73(6): 786-791.

Affiliation

School of Engineering Science, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, Canada.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Gerontological Society of America)

DOI

10.1093/gerona/glx196

PMID

29040497

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Although a fall is a necessary prerequisite to a fall-related injury, previous studies suggest that frequent fallers are at lower injury risk for a given fall. We tested the hypotheses that differences in protective responses or the circumstances of falls underlie differences in injury risk with fall frequency.

METHODS: We analyzed video footage of 897 falls experienced by 220 long-term care residents (mean age 82±9 yrs) to identify the cause of imbalance, activity leading to falling, direction of fall initiation, balance recovery and fall protective responses, and occurrence of impact to the head or hip. We further obtained injury information from the facilities' fall registration. We used generalized estimating equation models to examine the association between quartiles of fall frequency, injury risk, and fall characteristics.

RESULTS: Residents with the highest fall frequency group (Q4; ≥5.6 falls/year) were less likely to sustain an injury per fall. They were less likely to fall during walking and more likely to fall during stand-to-sit transfers. Residents in the lowest fall frequency group (Q1; <1.15 falls/year) were more likely to fall during walking, and walking was associated with an increased risk for injury.

CONCLUSION: When compared to less frequent fallers, more frequent fallers had a lower risk for injury per fall. This appeared to be explained by differences in the circumstances of falls, and not by protective responses. Injury prevention strategies in long-term care should target both frequent and infrequent fallers, as the latter are more mobile and apt to sustain injury.


Language: en

Keywords

accidental falls; frequent fallers; injury, aged 65 and over; long-term care

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