Assessing the Quality of a Non-randomized Pragmatic Trial for Primary Prevention of Falls among Older Adults

Current approaches to falls prevention mostly rely on secondary and tertiary prevention and target individuals at high risk of falls. An alternative is primary prevention, in which all seniors are screened, referred as appropriate, and educated regarding falls risk. Little information is available o...

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Veröffentlicht in:Prevention science 2015-01, Vol.16 (1), p.31-40
Hauptverfasser: Albert, Steven M., Edelstein, Offer, King, Jennifer, Flatt, Jason, Lin, Chyongchiou J., Boudreau, Robert, Newman, Anne B.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Current approaches to falls prevention mostly rely on secondary and tertiary prevention and target individuals at high risk of falls. An alternative is primary prevention, in which all seniors are screened, referred as appropriate, and educated regarding falls risk. Little information is available on research designs that allow investigation of this approach in the setting of aging services delivery, where randomization may not be possible. Healthy Steps for Older Adults , a statewide program of the Pennsylvania (PA) Department of Aging, involves a combination of education about falls and screening for balance problems, with referral to personal physicians and home safety assessments. We developed a non-randomized statewide trial, Falls Free PA, to assess its effectiveness in reducing falls incidence over 12 months. We recruited 814 seniors who completed the program (503 first-time participants, 311 people repeating the program) and 1,020 who did not participate in the program, from the same sites. We assessed the quality of this non-randomized design by examining recruitment, follow-up across study groups, and comparability at baseline. Of older adults approached in senior centers, 90.5 % ( n  = 2,219) signed informed consent, and 1,834 (82.4 %) completed baseline assessments and were eligible for follow-up. Attrition in the three groups over 12 months was low and non-differential (
ISSN:1389-4986
1573-6695
DOI:10.1007/s11121-014-0466-2