Falls in institutions for older adults: characterization of fall occurrences and associated risk factors

Authors

  • Cristina Rosa Soares Lavareda Baixinho Lisbon School of Nursing
  • Maria dos Anjos Coelho Rodrigues Dixe Superior School of Health of the Polytechnic of Leiria

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5216/ree.v17i4.31858

Keywords:

Homes for the Aged, Accidental Falls, Risk Factors

Abstract

Falls are the main accident for older adults, with consequences on functionality. Older adults impose restrictions or have restrictions imposed on their activities for fear of new falls. This prospective longitudinal study was conducted with 104 institutionalized older adults during six months with the following goals: to determine the prevalence of falls, to characterize the falls according to place, time, resulting injuries, supervision of the older adult, action performed at the time of the fall, and to relate the occurrence of the fall to the risk of falling, medical diagnoses, number of medications in use, type of medication, degree of dependency, age, and gender. The prevalence of falls was 37.5%, and they happened mostly in the bedroom, while walking after getting up from the bed. Those under risk in the Morse Fall Scale (p=0.034) and on sedatives (p=0.007) face a higher prevalence of falls. This study enables the possibility of making suggestions for practice, training and investigation.

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Author Biographies

Cristina Rosa Soares Lavareda Baixinho, Lisbon School of Nursing

Nurse, Master in School Health. Professor at the Lisbon School of Nursing. Lisbon, Portugal. E-mail: crbaixinho@esel.pt.

Maria dos Anjos Coelho Rodrigues Dixe, Superior School of Health of the Polytechnic of Leiria

Nurse, Doctor in Nursing. Instructor at the Superior School of Health of the Polytechnic of Leiria. Leiria, Portugal. E-mail: manjos.dixe@gmail.com.

Published

2015-12-31

How to Cite

1.
Baixinho CRSL, Dixe M dos ACR. Falls in institutions for older adults: characterization of fall occurrences and associated risk factors. Rev. Eletr. Enferm. [Internet]. 2015 Dec. 31 [cited 2024 Jul. 17];17(4):31858. Available from: https://revistas.ufg.br/fen/article/view/31858

Issue

Section

Original Article