Faculty of Physical Therapy, Mahidol University, 999, Phuttamonthon 4, Road, Nakhon Pathom, Salaya District, 73170, Thailand.
Faculty of Medicine Vajira Hospital, Navamindradhiraj University, Bangkok, Thailand.
BMC Geriatr. 2020 Jun 5;20(1):194. doi: 10.1186/s12877-020-01582-z.
Walking is the most common population-wide campaign for health promotion in older people. However, the cutoff threshold for walking steps/day to identify the older people who are at risk of falling is not recommended. Therefore, the objectives were to investigate the association between all possible risk factors including physical performance, physical activity and fall incidence over the six-month in community-dwelling older people who had low-risk of falling and to identify walking threshold (steps/day) for reducing risk of fall.
The older people who aged ≥60 years and had free of falling for 1 year were invited to participate in this study. They lived in five communities in Bangkok Thailand. Demographics and physical performances were collected at baseline. Walking (step/day) and 24-h physical activity (PA) were monitored for 5 consecutive days by the Actical® accelerometer wrapped on non-dominant wrists. The Physical Activity Scale for the Elderly (PASE) questionnaire was used to record activities in the past 7 days by interview. A monthly calendar was used to record fall incidence over the 6 months. Unadjusted and adjusted hazard ratio (HR) with 95% confidence interval (CI) were analyzed using the Cox's proportional hazard regression. The Kaplan Meier curve illustrated the probability to survive from fall over the 6 months.
Of 255, 33 older people (12.94%) reported first-fall incidence over the 6 months. Fall incidence density rate was 0.79 per 1000 person-day. Our findings showed that significant association between fall incidence and behavioral risk factors including PASE scores < 100 (HR = 3.53; 95% CI: 1.24-10.04), walking < 5000 steps/day (HR = 3.6; 95% CI: 1.76-7.31) and moderate to vigorous intensity of PA at < 60 min/week (HR = 3.66; 95% CI: 1.12-12.01). Fall incidence were related to the following risk factors: age (HR = 3.54; 95% CI: 1.37-9.11), took polypharmacy/antipsychotics (HR = 4.32; 95% CI: 2.12-8.79), presence of urinary incontinence (HR = 2.87; 95% CI: 1.45-5.68), low functional mobility by Timed Up and Go ≥13.5 s (HR = 6.43; 95% CI: 2.65-15.57).
This study proposed walking ≥5000 steps/day as a cutoff threshold to recommend for reducing risk of falling in community-dwelling older people who had low-risk of falling.
步行是最常见的针对老年人的促进健康的人群活动。然而,目前还没有推荐用于识别有跌倒风险的老年人的最佳步行步数/天的截止阈值。因此,本研究旨在调查在无跌倒风险的社区居住的老年人中,所有可能的风险因素(包括身体表现、身体活动和跌倒发生率)之间的关联,并确定降低跌倒风险的步行阈值(步数/天)。
邀请年龄≥60 岁且在过去 1 年内无跌倒的老年人参加本研究。他们居住在泰国曼谷的五个社区。在基线时收集人口统计学和身体表现数据。使用 Actical®加速度计(绑在非优势手腕上)连续 5 天监测步行(步数/天)和 24 小时身体活动(PA)。使用活动量表(PASE)问卷通过访谈记录过去 7 天的活动情况。使用月历记录 6 个月内的跌倒发生率。使用 Cox 比例风险回归分析无调整和调整后的危险比(HR)和 95%置信区间(CI)。Kaplan-Meier 曲线说明了 6 个月内免于跌倒的概率。
在 255 名老年人中,有 33 名(12.94%)在 6 个月内报告首次跌倒发生率。跌倒发生率密度为 0.79/1000 人日。我们的研究结果表明,跌倒发生率与行为风险因素之间存在显著关联,包括 PASE 评分<100(HR=3.53;95%CI:1.24-10.04)、步行<5000 步/天(HR=3.6;95%CI:1.76-7.31)和每周中等到剧烈强度的 PA<60 分钟(HR=3.66;95%CI:1.12-12.01)。跌倒发生率与以下风险因素相关:年龄(HR=3.54;95%CI:1.37-9.11)、服用多种药物/抗精神病药物(HR=4.32;95%CI:2.12-8.79)、存在尿失禁(HR=2.87;95%CI:1.45-5.68)、Timed Up and Go 测试时间≥13.5 秒(HR=6.43;95%CI:2.65-15.57)。
本研究提出每天步行≥5000 步作为一个建议的阈值,以降低有跌倒风险的社区居住的老年人的跌倒风险。