The University of Texas Medical Branch, School of Nursing, Galveston, TX, USA.
University of Saskatchewan, College of Medicine, Saskatoon, Saskatchewan S7N 2Z4, Canada.
Clin Interv Aging. 2020 Jun 25;15:971-989. doi: 10.2147/CIA.S256599. eCollection 2020.
Approximately, 14% of older adults aged 65 years and over experience a fall within 1 month post-hospital discharge. Adequate self-management may minimize the impact of these falls; however, research is lacking on why some older adults engage in self-management to prevent falls while others do not.
We conducted a scoping review to identify barriers and facilitators to older adults participating in fall-prevention strategies after transitioning home from acute hospitalization. Eligibility criteria were peer-reviewed journal articles published during 2009-2019 which were written in English and contained any of the following keywords or their synonyms: "fall-prevention," "older adults," "post-discharge" and "transition care." We systematically and selectively summarized the findings of these articles using the Joanna Briggs Institute guidelines and the PRISMA-ScR reporting guidelines. Seven bibliographic databases were searched: PubMed/MEDLINE, ERIC, CINAHL, Cochrane Library, Scopus, PsycINFO, and Web of Science. We used the Capability-Opportunity-Motivation-Behavior (COM-B) model of health behavior change as a framework to guide the content, thematic analysis, and descriptive results.
Seventeen articles were finally selected. The most frequently mentioned barriers and facilitators for each COM-B dimension differed. Motivation factors include such as older adults lacking inner drive and self-denial of being at risk for falls (barriers) and following-up with older adults and correcting inaccurate perceptions of falls and fall-prevention strategies (facilitators).
This scoping review revealed gaps and future research areas in fall prevention relative to behavioral changes. These findings may enable tailoring feasible fall-prevention interventions for older adults after transitioning home from acute hospitalization.
大约有 14%的 65 岁及以上老年人在出院后 1 个月内会经历跌倒。适当的自我管理可以最大限度地减少这些跌倒的影响;然而,为什么有些老年人参与预防跌倒的自我管理,而有些老年人则不参与,这方面的研究还很缺乏。
我们进行了范围综述,以确定老年人在从急性住院过渡回家后参与预防跌倒策略的障碍和促进因素。合格标准是 2009 年至 2019 年期间发表的同行评审期刊文章,用英文撰写,包含以下关键词或其同义词中的任何一个:“跌倒预防”、“老年人”、“出院后”和“过渡护理”。我们使用 Joanna Briggs 研究所指南和 PRISMA-ScR 报告指南系统地和有选择性地总结了这些文章的发现。我们在 7 个文献数据库中进行了搜索:PubMed/MEDLINE、ERIC、CINAHL、Cochrane 图书馆、Scopus、PsycINFO 和 Web of Science。我们使用健康行为改变的能力-机会-动机-行为(COM-B)模型作为框架,指导内容、主题分析和描述性结果。
最终选择了 17 篇文章。每个 COM-B 维度中最常提到的障碍和促进因素都不同。动机因素包括老年人缺乏内在动力和自我否认有跌倒风险(障碍),以及随访老年人并纠正对跌倒和跌倒预防策略的不准确看法(促进因素)。
这项范围综述揭示了与行为改变相关的跌倒预防方面的差距和未来研究领域。这些发现可能使我们能够为从急性住院过渡回家的老年人量身定制可行的跌倒预防干预措施。