Falls prevention in community care: 10 years on

Clinical Interventions in Aging
Elissa BurtonKeith D Hill

Abstract

A million older people living in Australia receive community care services each year due to experiencing functional or mental health difficulties. This group may be at greater risk of falling than similar-aged people not receiving services. However, there is limited falls prevention research for this population. The aim of this study was to identify the falls prevalence rates of older people from 10 Australian community care organizations and compare current falls prevention data to a study 10 years prior that utilized the same 10 organizations. This study also identified factors associated with falling for this population. This is a cross-sectional descriptive study, in which 5,338 questionnaires were mailed to a random sample of community care recipients aged ≥65 years. A total of 1,991 questionnaires were returned (37.3%), with 47.7% of respondents having fallen in the previous year, and 32.7% in the month prior to completing the questionnaire, similar to 10 years prior. Community care clients had a 50% higher falls rate than that reported for similar-aged people not receiving services, and this remained unchanged over the last 10 years. Eighty-six per cent of fallers had fallen once or twice, and 60% reported being injured....Continue Reading

Citations

Feb 12, 2019·Health Care for Women International·Renata B OrawiecPaweł Tomaszewski
Jul 21, 2020·Health & Social Care in the Community·Elissa BurtonKeith D Hill
Sep 3, 2020·Health & Social Care in the Community·Lindsey BrettJohanna I Westbrook
Apr 17, 2020·European Geriatric Medicine·Saara K SoukolaMika T Ukkonen
Jan 21, 2021·International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health·María Del Carmen Miranda-DuroJavier Pereira
Feb 25, 2021·Nursing Open·Songmei CaoQinghua Zhao
Jul 2, 2021·Journal of Cachexia, Sarcopenia and Muscle·Duy K HoangTuan V Nguyen

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excel
Statistical Package for the Social Sciences ( SPSS )

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