Department of Kinesiology and Health Science, Emma Eccles Jones College of Education and Human Services, Utah State University, Logan, Utah, USA.
School of Business, College of Business, Innovation, Leadership and Technology, Marymount University, Marymount Center for Optimal Aging, Arlington, Virginia, USA.
Gerontologist. 2024 May 1;64(5). doi: 10.1093/geront/gnad139.
Fall incidents from unsafe home environments are frequent in older-adult homes but the literature is ambiguous whether it is the presence/absence, or the interplay of such conditions and physical functioning that is of salience. We therefore estimated whether unsafe home environment is adversely associated with subsequent falls among older adults and what proportion of this association was mediated through limitations in daily and instrumental activities of daily living (ADL/IADL).
Using a nationally representative sample of community-dwelling Medicare beneficiaries (≥65 years) in the 2018-2019 National Health and Aging Trends Study (n = 2,599), we conducted bivariate and multivariable analyses. We examined baseline conditions of home disorders, unsafe bathroom settings, unsafe house/building features, and house disrepairs in 2018 and their relation with subsequent falls in 2019, after controlling for covariates. To assess whether ADL/IADL limitations mediated this relationship, we employed the Karlson-Holm-Breen methodology.
In 2019, the self-reported prevalence of falls among older adults was estimated at 34.68%. Although baseline home disorders had both a direct (adjusted odds ratio [aOR]: 1.14, 95% confidence interval [CI]:1.03,1.26) and an indirect effect through limitations in ADL and IADL (aOR: 1.01; 95% CI: 1.00,1.03), the relation between unsafe bathroom settings and subsequent falls was unclear. Unsafe house/building features and house disrepairs were not statistically significantly related either directly or indirectly with subsequent falls.
Addressing home disorders through policy and housing assessments to highlight home environmental safety would be essential to address falls among older adults.
在老年人家中,不安全的家庭环境导致的跌倒事件频繁发生,但目前的文献对于导致跌倒的因素是环境条件和身体功能的存在或相互作用仍存在争议。因此,我们评估了不安全的家庭环境是否与老年人随后发生跌倒有关,以及这种关联有多少是通过日常生活活动(ADL)和工具性日常生活活动(IADL)的限制来介导的。
我们使用了 2018-2019 年全国健康老龄化趋势研究(National Health and Aging Trends Study)中具有代表性的社区居住的医疗保险受益人(≥65 岁)的全国样本(n=2599),进行了单变量和多变量分析。我们研究了 2018 年家庭障碍、不安全浴室环境、不安全房屋/建筑特征和房屋损坏的基线情况,以及在控制了协变量后,它们与 2019 年后续跌倒的关系。为了评估 ADL/IADL 限制是否介导了这种关系,我们采用了卡尔森-霍尔姆-布林方法。
2019 年,估计老年人的跌倒自我报告患病率为 34.68%。尽管基线家庭障碍既有直接作用(调整后的优势比[aOR]:1.14,95%置信区间[CI]:1.03,1.26),也通过 ADL 和 IADL 的限制产生间接作用(aOR:1.01;95% CI:1.00,1.03),但不安全浴室环境与随后跌倒之间的关系并不明确。不安全的房屋/建筑特征和房屋损坏与随后的跌倒也没有直接或间接的统计学关系。
通过政策和住房评估来解决家庭障碍,以突出家庭环境的安全性,对于解决老年人跌倒问题至关重要。