
@article{ref1,
title="Incidence and Cost of Serious Fall-Related Injuries in Nursing Homes",
journal="Clinical nursing research",
year="2012",
author="Quigley, Patricia A. and Campbell, Robert R. and Bulat, Tatjana and Olney, Ronald L. and Buerhaus, Peter and Needleman, Jack",
volume="21",
number="1",
pages="10-23",
abstract="Background: Fall-related injuries (FRIs) result in morbidity and mortality for patients,as well as unnecessary expense to health care institutions. Objectives: (a) Estimate the incidence of falls and FRIs with a nursing home as the source of admission in Veterans Administration (VA) and non-VA facilities. (b) Estimate the cost of hospitalizations for each level of FRI severity. Research Design: Retrospective analysis of falls and FRI resulting in a hospitalization whose source of admission was a VA nursing home. Data: Falls and FRIs were obtained from Minimum Data Set (MDS) reports (January 2007-June 2009). Costs were obtained from the VA Decision Support System reports and Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP) reports (2000-2006). Measures: Incidence of falls, fracture incidence, number of hospitalizations for FRIs, and costs associated with hospitalization for by level of FRI severity. Results: Fall incidence was 10.6% in VA and 13.1% in CMS facilities. Fracture incidence was 0.9% in VHA and 1.65% in CMS facilities. Over a 3-year period, there were 2,400 admissions to VHA hospitals for FRI, with 55.4% hip fractures and10.1% intracranial injuries, with an average cost of US$23,723 per admission. Over a 9-year period, there were 141,308 admissions from nursing homes to non-VA hospitals for FRIs, with 38.8% hip fractures, 35.7% other fractures, and 11.1% intracranial injuries, with an average cost of US$31,507 per admission. Conclusions: Prevention program emphasis should shift away from a focus on preventing falls as a measure of quality care to decreasing FRIs. These findings support implementation of injury prevention programs for the elderly that reduces risk for injury as the primary outcome.<p /> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="1054-7738",
doi="10.1177/1054773811414180",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1054773811414180"
}