Technology for Injury Prevention in Seniors Program, Injury Prevention and Mobility Laboratory, Department of Biomedical Physiology and Kinesiology, Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, BC, Canada.
Lancet. 2013 Jan 5;381(9860):47-54. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(12)61263-X. Epub 2012 Oct 17.
Falls in elderly people are a major health burden, especially in the long-term care environment. Yet little objective evidence is available for how and why falls occur in this population. We aimed to provide such evidence by analysing real-life falls in long-term care captured on video.
We did this observational study between April 20, 2007, and June 23, 2010, in two long-term care facilities in British Columbia, Canada. Digital video cameras were installed in common areas (dining rooms, lounges, hallways). When a fall occurred, facility staff completed an incident report and contacted our teams so that we could collect video footage. A team reviewed each fall video with a validated questionnaire that probed the cause of imbalance and activity at the time of falling. We then tested whether differences existed in the proportion of participants falling due to the various causes, and while engaging in various activities, with generalised linear models, repeated measures logistic regression, and log-linear Poisson regression.
We captured 227 falls from 130 individuals (mean age 78 years, SD 10). The most frequent cause of falling was incorrect weight shifting, which accounted for 41% (93 of 227) of falls, followed by trip or stumble (48, 21%), hit or bump (25, 11%), loss of support (25, 11%), and collapse (24, 11%). Slipping accounted for only 3% (six) of falls. The three activities associated with the highest proportion of falls were forward walking (54 of 227 falls, 24%), standing quietly (29 falls, 13%), and sitting down (28 falls, 12%). Compared with previous reports from the long-term care setting, we identified a higher occurrence of falls during standing and transferring, a lower occurrence during walking, and a larger proportion due to centre-of-mass perturbations than base-of-support perturbations.
By providing insight into the sequences of events that most commonly lead to falls, our results should lead to more valid and effective approaches for balance assessment and fall prevention in long-term care.
Canadian Institutes for Health Research.
老年人跌倒对健康构成了重大负担,特别是在长期护理环境中。然而,对于这一人群中跌倒的发生方式和原因,几乎没有客观证据。我们旨在通过分析长期护理环境中通过视频捕捉到的实际跌倒情况来提供此类证据。
我们于 2007 年 4 月 20 日至 2010 年 6 月 23 日在加拿大不列颠哥伦比亚省的两家长期护理机构进行了这项观察性研究。在公共区域(餐厅、休息室、走廊)安装了数字摄像机。当发生跌倒时,设施工作人员会填写一份事故报告并联系我们的团队,以便我们收集视频片段。一个团队使用经过验证的问卷审查了每一个跌倒视频,该问卷探查了失衡的原因以及跌倒时的活动情况。然后,我们使用广义线性模型、重复测量逻辑回归和对数线性泊松回归测试了由于各种原因导致参与者跌倒的比例以及在进行各种活动时是否存在差异。
我们从 130 名个体中捕捉到了 227 次跌倒(平均年龄 78 岁,标准差 10 岁)。最常见的跌倒原因是不正确的体重转移,占 41%(227 次跌倒中的 93 次),其次是绊倒或绊脚(48 次,21%)、撞击或碰撞(25 次,11%)、失去支撑(25 次,11%)和崩溃(24 次,11%)。滑倒仅占跌倒的 3%(6 次)。与长期护理环境中的先前报告相比,我们确定了在向前行走(227 次跌倒中的 54 次,24%)、安静站立(29 次跌倒,13%)和坐下(28 次跌倒,12%)这三种活动中跌倒的比例最高。与长期护理环境中的先前报告相比,我们发现站立和转移时跌倒的发生率较高,行走时跌倒的发生率较低,因质心扰动而跌倒的比例大于因基底支持扰动而跌倒的比例。
通过深入了解最常导致跌倒的事件序列,我们的研究结果应该为长期护理中的平衡评估和跌倒预防提供更有效和有效的方法。
加拿大卫生研究院。