Proportion, Pattern, and Predictors of Falls in Older Adults – A Community-based Observational Study in Rural West Bengal

IF 1.2 Q3 OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY Journal of Mid-life Health Pub Date : 2023-01-01 DOI:10.4103/jmh.jmh_35_23
Dipankar Jana, Monalisha Sahu, Bobby Paul, Sandipta Chakraborty, Lina Bandyopadhyay, Ranjan Das
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Abstract

Introduction: In spite of falls being a major public health problem, where most of the falls are preventable, there is a lack of epidemiological investigation among those aged 50 and above, especially in developing countries. Hence, we investigate the proportion, pattern, and predictors of falls in this age group. Materials and Methods: This cross-sectional community-based study was done in the Uluberia-II block of Howrah district, West Bengal, from February to July 2021. A multistage cluster sampling method was used to meet the sample size. Data were collected with the help of a structured interview schedule. Predictors were estimated by the SPSS version 16 and defined in adjusted odds ratio (AOR) with a 95% confidence interval. Results: Among 170 study participants, 34.7% (59/170) experienced at least one episode of fall, while 20.6% (35/170) experienced recurrent falls in 12 months. Most (78%; 46/59) falls occurred in the home environment and due to slippage (67.8%; 40/59) on the floor. 84.7% (50/59) sustained any type of injuries, 47.5% (28/59) required either consultation of a physician or medication, and 6.8% (4/59) required hospitalization. Safety Checklist Score measured 75.3% (128/170) had a poor household environment, within that 30.6% (52/170) had a seriously poor household environment, which was an important predictor of falls ([AOR] = 3.59 [1.24–10.38]). Fear of fall (AOR = 6.18 [1.77–21.53]) measured by shortfall efficacy scale and nonformal education (AOR = 5.05 [1.33–19.07]) were also predictors of falls. Conclusion: Considerable proportion of falls occurred in the past year, which can be preventable by improving modifiable environmental factors and detection of fear of fall in persons at different levels of health-care facilities.
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老年人跌倒的比例、模式和预测因素——西孟加拉邦农村一项基于社区的观察研究
导言:尽管跌倒是一个主要的公共卫生问题,而且大多数跌倒是可以预防的,但在50岁及以上的人群中,特别是在发展中国家,缺乏流行病学调查。因此,我们调查了这个年龄组跌倒的比例、模式和预测因素。材料和方法:这项横断面社区研究于2021年2月至7月在西孟加拉邦Howrah区的Uluberia-II街区进行。采用多阶段整群抽样方法满足样本量。数据是在结构化面试时间表的帮助下收集的。预测因子采用SPSS 16版进行估计,并以校正优势比(AOR)定义,置信区间为95%。结果:在170名研究参与者中,34.7%(59/170)至少经历过一次跌倒,而20.6%(35/170)在12个月内反复跌倒。大部分(78%;46/59)发生在家庭环境和由于滑动(67.8%;40/59)在地板上。84.7%(50/59)遭受任何类型的伤害,47.5%(28/59)需要咨询医生或药物治疗,6.8%(4/59)需要住院治疗。安全检查表评分75.3%(128/170)家庭环境较差,其中30.6%(52/170)家庭环境严重较差,是发生跌倒的重要预测因子(AOR = 3.59[1.24-10.38])。不足效能量表测量的跌倒恐惧(AOR = 6.18[1.77-21.53])和非正规教育(AOR = 5.05[1.33-19.07])也是跌倒的预测因子。结论:相当大比例的跌倒发生在过去一年中,这是可以通过改善可改变的环境因素和在不同级别的卫生保健机构中发现人们对跌倒的恐惧来预防的。
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来源期刊
Journal of Mid-life Health
Journal of Mid-life Health Social Sciences-Health (social science)
CiteScore
1.70
自引率
9.10%
发文量
39
审稿时长
43 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of mid-life health is the official journal of the Indian Menopause society published Quarterly in January, April, July and October. It is peer reviewed, scientific journal of mid-life health and its problems. It includes all aspects of mid-life health, preventive as well as curative. The journal publishes on subjects such as gynecology, neurology, geriatrics, psychiatry, endocrinology, urology, andrology, psychology, healthy ageing, cardiovascular health, bone health, quality of life etc. as relevant of men and women in their midlife. The Journal provides a visible platform to the researchers as well as clinicians to publish their experiences in this area thereby helping in the promotion of mid-life health leading to healthy ageing, growing need due to increasing life expectancy. The Editorial team has maintained high standards and published original research papers, case reports and review articles from the best of the best contributors both national & international, consistently so that now, it has become a great tool in the hands of menopause practitioners.
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