Author/Authors :
Diana Rucker، نويسنده , , Brian H. Rowe، نويسنده , , Jeffrey A. Johnson، نويسنده , , Ivan P. Steiner، نويسنده , , Anthony S. Russell، نويسنده , , David A. Hanley، نويسنده , , Walter P. Maksymowych، نويسنده , , Brian R. Holroyd، نويسنده , , Charles H. Harley، نويسنده , , Donald W. Morrish، نويسنده , , Brian J. Wirzba، نويسنده , , Sumit R. Majumdar، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Objectives.
Falls and fear of falling are a major health problem. We sought to determine the effectiveness of an educational intervention in reducing fear of falling and preventing recurrent falls in community-dwelling patients after a fragility fracture.
Methods.
One hundred two community-dwelling patients aged 50 years or older who fell and sustained a wrist fracture and were treated at Emergency Departments in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada (2001–2002) were allocated to either standardized educational leaflets and post-discharge telephone counseling regarding fall prevention strategies (“intervention”) or attention-controls (“controls”). Main outcomes were fear of falling and recurrent falls 3 months after fracture.
Results.
Mean age was 67 years and most patients were female (80%). The majority of falls (76%) leading to fracture occurred outdoors. Three months post-fracture, almost half of patients (48%) reported increased fear of falling and 11 of 102 (11%) reported falling again. The intervention did not reduce the fear of falling (43% had increased fear vs. 53% of controls, adjusted P value = 0.55) or decrease recurrent falls (17% fell vs. 5% of controls, adjusted P value = 0.059) within 3 months of fracture.
Conclusions.
An educational intervention undertaken in the Emergency Department was no more effective than usual care in reducing fear of falling or recurrent falls in community-dwelling patients. Future strategies must address a number of dimensions beyond simple education.
Keywords :
Fear of falling , falls , Fall prevention , Wrist fractures , Community-dwelling patients , Patient education