Fleming Jane, Matthews Fiona E, Brayne Carol
Department of Public Health and Primary Care, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
BMC Geriatr. 2008 Mar 17;8:6. doi: 10.1186/1471-2318-8-6.
The "oldest old" are now the fastest growing section of most western populations, yet there are scarcely any data concerning even the common problem of falls amongst the very old. Prospective data collection is encouraged as the most reliable method for researching older people's falls, though in clinical practice guidelines advise taking a history of any recalled falls. This study set out to inform service planning by describing the epidemiology of falls in advanced old age using both retrospectively and prospectively collected falls data.
Re-survey of over-90-year-olds in a longitudinal cohort study - cross-sectional interview and intensive 12-month follow-up.
90 women and 20 men participating in a population-based cohort (aged 91-105 years, in care-homes and community-dwelling) recruited from representative general practices in Cambridge, UKMeasurements: Prospective falls data were collected using fall calendars and telephone follow-up for one year after cross-sectional survey including fall history.
58% were reported to have fallen at least once in the previous year and 60% in the 1-year follow-up. The proportion reported to have fallen more than once was lower using retrospective recall of the past year than prospective reports gathered the following year (34% versus 45%), as were fall rates (1.6 and 2.8 falls/person-year respectively). Repeated falls in the past year were more highly predictive of falls during the following year - IRR 4.7, 95% CI 2.6-8.7 - than just one - IRR 3.6, 95% CI 2.0-6.3, using negative binomial regression. Only 1/5 reportedly did not fall during either the year before or after interview.
Fall rates in this representative sample of over-90-year-olds are even higher than previous reports from octogenarians. Recalled falls last year, particularly repeated falls, strongly predicted falls during follow-up. Similar proportions of people who fell were reported by retrospective and prospective methods covering two consecutive years. Recall methods may underestimate numbers of repeated falls and the extent of recurrent falling. Professionals caring for people of advanced age can easily ask routinely whether someone has fallen at all, or more than once, in the past year to identify those at high risk of subsequent falls.
“最年长者”如今是多数西方人口中增长最快的群体,然而,即便对于极年长者中常见的跌倒问题,几乎也没有相关数据。前瞻性数据收集作为研究老年人跌倒最可靠的方法受到鼓励,不过临床实践指南建议了解任何既往跌倒史。本研究旨在通过使用回顾性和前瞻性收集的跌倒数据描述高龄老人跌倒的流行病学情况,为服务规划提供信息。
对一项纵向队列研究中的90岁以上老人进行重新调查——横断面访谈及为期12个月的密集随访。
90名女性和20名男性参与了一项基于人群的队列研究(年龄在91 - 105岁,居住在养老院和社区),他们是从英国剑桥具有代表性的普通诊所招募而来。测量方法:在横断面调查(包括跌倒史)之后,使用跌倒日历和电话随访收集为期一年的前瞻性跌倒数据。
据报告,58%的人在前一年至少跌倒过一次,在1年随访中这一比例为60%。与次年收集的前瞻性报告相比,通过回顾过去一年的情况报告的跌倒不止一次的比例更低(34%对45%),跌倒发生率也是如此(分别为每人年1.6次和2.8次跌倒)。使用负二项回归分析,过去一年中多次跌倒比仅一次跌倒更能预测次年的跌倒情况——发病率比为4.7,95%置信区间为2.6 - 8.7,而仅一次跌倒的发病率比为3.6,95%置信区间为2.0 - 6.3。据报告,只有五分之一的人在访谈前一年和访谈后一年都没有跌倒。
在这个90岁以上老人的代表性样本中,跌倒发生率甚至高于先前关于八旬老人的报告。去年回忆起的跌倒,尤其是多次跌倒,强烈预示着随访期间的跌倒情况。回顾性和前瞻性方法连续两年报告的跌倒人数比例相似。回顾性方法可能低估了多次跌倒的数量和反复跌倒的程度。照顾高龄老人的专业人员可以很容易地常规询问某人在过去一年是否跌倒过,或跌倒不止一次,以识别那些后续跌倒风险高的人。