The impact of falls on activities of daily living in older adults: A retrospective cohort analysis

Falls contribute to impairments in activities of daily living (ADLs), resulting in significant declines in the quality of life, safety, and functioning of older adults. Understanding the magnitude and duration of the effect of falls on ADLs, as well as identifying the characteristics of older adults...

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Veröffentlicht in:PloS one 2024-01, Vol.19 (1), p.e0294017-e0294017
Hauptverfasser: Adam, Claire E, Fitzpatrick, Annette L, Leary, Cindy S, Ilango, Sindana D, Phelan, Elizabeth A, Semmens, Erin O
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container_title PloS one
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Fitzpatrick, Annette L
Leary, Cindy S
Ilango, Sindana D
Phelan, Elizabeth A
Semmens, Erin O
description Falls contribute to impairments in activities of daily living (ADLs), resulting in significant declines in the quality of life, safety, and functioning of older adults. Understanding the magnitude and duration of the effect of falls on ADLs, as well as identifying the characteristics of older adults more likely to have post-fall ADL impairment is critical to inform fall prevention and post-fall intervention. The purpose of this study is to 1) Quantify the association between falls and post-fall ADL impairment and 2) Model trajectories of ADL impairment pre- and post-fall to estimate the long-term impact of falls and identify characteristics of older adults most likely to have impairment. Study participants were from the Ginkgo Evaluation of Memory Study, a randomized controlled trial in older adults (age 75+) in the United States. Self-reported incident falls and ADL scores were ascertained every 6 months over a 7-year study period. We used Cox proportional hazards analyses (n = 2091) to quantify the association between falls and ADL impairment and latent class trajectory modeling (n = 748) to visualize trajectories of ADL impairment pre-and post-fall. Falls reported in the previous 6 months were associated with impairment in ADLs (HR: 1.42; 95% CI 1.32, 1.52) in fully adjusted models. Based on trajectory modeling (n = 748), 19% (n = 139) of participants had increased, persistent ADL impairment after falling. Participants who were female, lived in a neighborhood with higher deprivation, or experienced polypharmacy were more likely to have ADL impairment post-fall. Falls are associated with increased ADL impairment, and this impairment can persist over time. It is crucial that all older adults, and particularly those at higher risk of post-fall ADL impairment have access to comprehensive fall risk assessment and evidence-based fall prevention interventions, to help mitigate the negative impacts on ADL function.
doi_str_mv 10.1371/journal.pone.0294017
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Understanding the magnitude and duration of the effect of falls on ADLs, as well as identifying the characteristics of older adults more likely to have post-fall ADL impairment is critical to inform fall prevention and post-fall intervention. The purpose of this study is to 1) Quantify the association between falls and post-fall ADL impairment and 2) Model trajectories of ADL impairment pre- and post-fall to estimate the long-term impact of falls and identify characteristics of older adults most likely to have impairment. Study participants were from the Ginkgo Evaluation of Memory Study, a randomized controlled trial in older adults (age 75+) in the United States. Self-reported incident falls and ADL scores were ascertained every 6 months over a 7-year study period. We used Cox proportional hazards analyses (n = 2091) to quantify the association between falls and ADL impairment and latent class trajectory modeling (n = 748) to visualize trajectories of ADL impairment pre-and post-fall. Falls reported in the previous 6 months were associated with impairment in ADLs (HR: 1.42; 95% CI 1.32, 1.52) in fully adjusted models. Based on trajectory modeling (n = 748), 19% (n = 139) of participants had increased, persistent ADL impairment after falling. Participants who were female, lived in a neighborhood with higher deprivation, or experienced polypharmacy were more likely to have ADL impairment post-fall. Falls are associated with increased ADL impairment, and this impairment can persist over time. 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subjects Activities of Daily Living
Adults
Aged
Biology and Life Sciences
Cognition & reasoning
Cognitive ability
Cohort Studies
Dementia
Demographic aspects
Evaluation
Falls
Falls (Accidents)
Female
Health aspects
Human subjects
Humans
Impairment
Male
Medicine and Health Sciences
Mental health
Modelling
Neighborhoods
Nursing homes
Older people
People and Places
Physiological aspects
Prevention
Quality of Life
Questionnaires
Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic
Retrospective Studies
Risk assessment
Risk factors
Social Sciences
title The impact of falls on activities of daily living in older adults: A retrospective cohort analysis
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