Masud Tahir, Coupland Carol, Drummond Avril, Gladman John, Kendrick Denise, Sach Tracey, Harwood Rowan, Kumar Pradeep, Morris Rob, Taylor Rachael, Youde Jane, Conroy Simon
Clinical Gerontology and Research Unit, Nottingham City Hospital, Hucknall Road, Nottingham, NG5 1PB, UK.
Trials. 2006 Feb 27;7:5. doi: 10.1186/1745-6215-7-5.
Falls in older people are a major public health concern in terms of morbidity, mortality and cost. Previous studies suggest that multifactorial interventions can reduce falls, and many geriatric day hospitals are now offering falls intervention programmes. However, no studies have investigated whether these programmes, based in the day hospital are effective, nor whether they can be successfully applied to high-risk older people screened in primary care. The hypothesis is that a multidisciplinary falls assessment and intervention at Day hospitals can reduce the incidence of falls in older people identified within primary care as being at high risk of falling. This will be tested by a pragmatic parallel-group randomised controlled trial in which the participants, identified as at high risk of falling, will be randomised into either the intervention Day hospital arm or to a control (current practice) arm. Those participants preferring not to enter the full randomised study will be offered the opportunity to complete brief diaries only at monthly intervals. This data will be used to validate the screening questionnaire. Three day hospitals (2 Nottingham, 1 Derby) will provide the interventions, and the University of Nottingham's Departments of Primary Care, the Division of Rehabilitation and Ageing Unit, and the Trent Institute for Health Service Research will provide the methodological and statistical expertise. Four hundred subjects will be randomised into the two arms. The primary outcome measure will be the rate of falls over one year. Secondary outcome measures will include the proportion of people experiencing at least one fall, the proportion of people experiencing recurrent falls (>1), injuries, fear of falling, quality of life, institutionalisation rates, and use of health services. Cost-effectiveness analyses will be performed to inform health commissioners about resource allocation issues. The importance of this trial is that the results may be applicable to any UK day hospital setting. SITES: General practices across Nottinghamshire and Derbyshire. Day hospitals:Derbyshire Royal Infirmary (Southern Derbyshire Acute Hospitals NHS Trust)Sherwood Day Service (Nottingham City Hospital Trust)Leengate Day Hospital (Queen's Medical Centre Nottingham University Hospital NHS Trust).
就发病率、死亡率和成本而言,老年人跌倒问题是一个重大的公共卫生问题。以往研究表明,多因素干预措施能够减少跌倒发生,现在许多老年日间医院都在提供跌倒干预项目。然而,尚无研究调查这些基于日间医院的项目是否有效,也未探讨其能否成功应用于在初级保健机构筛查出的高危老年人。研究假设是,在日间医院开展多学科跌倒评估与干预,能够降低在初级保健机构中被确定为跌倒高危的老年人的跌倒发生率。这将通过一项实用的平行组随机对照试验进行验证,在该试验中,被确定为跌倒高危的参与者将被随机分为干预组(日间医院组)或对照组(现行做法组)。那些不愿参加完整随机研究的参与者将有机会仅每月填写简短日记。这些数据将用于验证筛查问卷。三家日间医院(两家位于诺丁汉,一家位于德比)将提供干预措施,诺丁汉大学的初级保健系、康复与老龄化部门以及特伦特卫生服务研究所以及特伦特卫生服务研究所将提供方法学和统计学专业知识。400名受试者将被随机分为两组。主要结局指标将是一年中的跌倒发生率。次要结局指标将包括至少经历一次跌倒的人群比例、经历反复跌倒(>1次)的人群比例、受伤情况、跌倒恐惧、生活质量、住院率以及卫生服务利用情况。将进行成本效益分析,为卫生专员提供资源分配问题方面的信息。这项试验的重要意义在于,其结果可能适用于英国任何日间医院环境。地点:诺丁汉郡和德比郡的全科诊所。日间医院:德比皇家医院(南德比郡急性医院国民保健服务信托基金)、舍伍德日间服务中心(诺丁汉市医院信托基金)、利恩盖特日间医院(诺丁汉大学医院国民保健服务信托基金女王医疗中心)。