Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Drexel University School of Public Health, 1505 Race Street, 6th Floor, MS 1033, Philadelphia, PA 19102, USA.
Ann Intern Med. 2010 Dec 21;153(12):815-25. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-153-12-201012210-00008.
Falls among older adults are both prevalent and preventable.
To describe the benefits and harms of interventions that could be used by primary care practitioners to prevent falling among community-dwelling older adults.
The reviewers evaluated trials from a good-quality systematic review published in 2003 and searched MEDLINE, the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, and CINAHL from the end of that review's search date to February 2010 to identify additional English-language trials.
Two reviewers independently screened 3423 abstracts and 638 articles to identify randomized, controlled trials (RCTs) of primary care-relevant interventions among community-dwelling older adults that reported falls or fallers as an outcome. Trials were independently critically appraised to include only good- or fair-quality trials; discrepancies were resolved by a third reviewer.
One reviewer abstracted data from 61 articles into standardized evidence tables that were verified by a second reviewer.
Overall, the included evidence was of fair quality. In 16 RCTs evaluating exercise or physical therapy, interventions reduced falling (risk ratio, 0.87 [95% CI, 0.81 to 0.94]). In 9 RCTs of vitamin D supplementation, interventions reduced falling (risk ratio, 0.83 [CI, 0.77 to 0.89]). In 19 trials involving multifactorial assessment and management, interventions with comprehensive management seemed to reduce falling, although overall pooled estimates were not statistically significant (risk ratio, 0.94 [CI, 0.87 to 1.02]). Limited evidence suggested that serious clinical harms were no more common for older adults in intervention groups than for those in control groups.
Interventions and methods of fall ascertainment were heterogeneous. Data on potential harms of interventions were scant and often not reported.
Primary care-relevant interventions exist that can reduce falling among community-dwelling older adults.
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.
老年人跌倒既普遍又可预防。
描述初级保健医生可用于预防社区居住的老年人跌倒的干预措施的益处和危害。
审查员评估了 2003 年发表的一项高质量系统评价中的试验,并检索了 MEDLINE、Cochrane 对照试验中心注册库、Cochrane 系统评价数据库和 CINAHL,以获取自该综述检索日期结束至 2010 年 2 月的其他英文试验。
两名审查员独立筛选了 3423 篇摘要和 638 篇文章,以确定针对社区居住的老年人的与初级保健相关的干预措施的随机对照试验(RCT),这些试验报告了跌倒或跌倒者作为结局。仅对质量良好或中等的试验进行独立严格评价;分歧由第三名审查员解决。
一名审查员将 61 篇文章的数据摘要到标准化证据表中,由第二名审查员验证。
总体而言,纳入的证据质量中等。在 16 项评估运动或物理治疗的 RCT 中,干预措施降低了跌倒的风险(风险比,0.87 [95%CI,0.81 至 0.94])。在 9 项维生素 D 补充 RCT 中,干预措施降低了跌倒的风险(风险比,0.83 [CI,0.77 至 0.89])。在 19 项涉及多因素评估和管理的试验中,综合管理的干预措施似乎降低了跌倒的风险,尽管总体汇总估计无统计学意义(风险比,0.94 [CI,0.87 至 1.02])。有限的证据表明,干预组的老年人与对照组相比,严重临床危害并不更常见。
干预措施和跌倒确定方法存在异质性。干预措施潜在危害的数据很少,且常常未报告。
存在可降低社区居住的老年人跌倒的与初级保健相关的干预措施。
医疗保健研究和质量局。