Title: Chapter 12: Falls in Older Adults
1Chapter 12 Falls in Older Adults
2Learning Objectives
- Acknowledge the complex health and cost issues
related to falls for older adults. - Describe older adults with a predisposition for
falls and falls with injury. - Identify intrinsic and extrinsic risk factors for
falls in older adults. - Incorporate a patient-specific fall risk
assessment into an individualized plan of care. - Recognize medications associated with falls in
older adults. - Identify patients at risk for restraints.
- Discuss nonrestraint interventions to prevent
falls.
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4Falls in Older Adults
- Preventable
- Life threatening
- Not a normal consequence of aging
- Geriatric syndrome
- Frequency increases with age and frailty
- May be first indicator of acute problem
- May stem from chronic disease
- May be a marker for progression of age-related
changes in vision, gait, strength
5Falls in the Hospital Setting
- Common problem for hospitalized older adults
- Up to 50 of hospitalized patients in the U.S.
are at risk for falls of those, 50 are injured - Most common adverse incident in hospitals 3-5
falls per 1,000 bed days (about 1,000,000
inpatient falls every year) - Fall represent a national measure of quality and
safety in the National Database of Nursing
Quality Indicators (NDNQI).
6Falls in the Hospital Setting (contd)
- Implications of Falls
- 20-30 suffer moderate to severe injuries
- 10-20 suffer fractures
- Repeated falls lead to ADL and IADL deficits,
high risk for further hospitalization,
disability, institutionalization, and death - Cost of fall injuries by 2020 expected to be
54.9 billion
7Falls in the Hospital Setting (contd)
- Risk Factors (Table 12-1, p. 460)
- Intrinsic related to the patients physiology
and physical changes. ex)cognitive/sensory
impairments, impaired mobility, frailty, meds.. - Extrinsic related to the physical environment.
Ex) stairs, poor lighting, restraints, cluttered
environment, side rails, unsuitable footwear - Fall Risk Assessment
- Tinetti Performance-Oriented Mobility Assessment
(POMA) - Timed Get Up and Go Test
8Falls in the Hospital Setting (contd)
- Fall Prevention and Safety Promotion Strategies
- Surveillance
- Nonrestraint fall prevention interventions
- Avoid Physical restraints and Chemical restraints
9Torso support
Leg restraint
Roll belt
Hand mitten
Soft belt
Seating restraint
Wheel chair positioner
10Falls in the Community Setting
Intrinsic Factors Extrinsic Factors
Age Gender Race Cognitive function Physical function Physical status Disease states Medications Environmental hazards Nonsupportive footwear Recent hospitalization Wheelchair use, reckless wheelchair use
11Falls in the Community Setting (contd)
- Fall Prevention and Safety Promotion Strategies
- Fall risk assessment
- Evaluate functional status ADLs, appropriate use
of adaptive equipment such as canes or walkers,
and fear of falling - PT evaluation for safe footwear and adaptive
devices - OT evaluation for safe living environment loose
cords, rugs, lighting
12Falls in the Community Setting
- Fall prevention (contd)
- Exercise programs Tai Chi
- Multifactorial intervention tailored to
individual cognitive and physical ability - Regular eye exams
- Postural hypotension or other cardiovascular
conditions - Calcium and Vitamin D
13Falls in the Community Setting (contd)
- Medications
- Beers Criteria identifies medications and doses
that may be harmful to adults age 65 - Less is more Start low and go slow
- Regular medication review
- Discontinue unnecessary therapy
- Medications implicated in falls
- benzodiazepines, sedatives and hypnotics,
antidepressants, antipsychotics (neuroleptics),
antiarrhythmics, digoxin, diuretics, alcohol
14Falls in the Community Setting (contd)
- Modify the environment
- Small children, pets
- Minimize clutter
- Throw rugs
- Stairs
- Hand rails
- Check flooring
- Educate client and family
- Pressure-sensitive bed alsrms
15Falls in the Community Setting (contd)
- Community Resources for Fall Prevention
- Los Angeles Falls Prevention Coalition
- StopFalls Network California
- Centers for Disease Control
- National Institute on Health and Agings Age Page
- Hartford Institute for Geriatric Nursing
guidelines
16Summary
- National healthcare organizations have tools and
resources nurses can use to provide health care
to older adults - Fall risk assessment during routine care may help
older adults maintain functional status and
improve quality of life. - Reducing falls lowers healthcare costs due to
fewer emergency room visits and hospital stays. - Environmental and multifactorial assessments and
interventions can make the difference between
safety and falling.
17Question
- If the nurse is assessing for extrinsic factors
for falls, which of the following should be
included? - throw rugs
- ataxia
- cognition
- dizziness