The population approach to falls injury prevention in older people: findings of a two community trial

File Size Format
64882_1.pdf 292Kb Adobe PDF View
Title The population approach to falls injury prevention in older people: findings of a two community trial
Author McClure, Roderick John; Hughes, Karen; Ren, Cizao; McKenzie, Kirsten; Dietrich, Uta; Vardon, Paul; Davis, Elizabeth; Newman, Beth
Journal Name BMC Public Health
Year Published 2010
Place of publication United Kingdom
Publisher Biomed Central
Abstract Background: There is a sound rationale for the population-based approach to falls injury prevention but there is currently insufficient evidence to advise governments and communities on how they can use population-based strategies to achieve desired reductions in the burden of falls-related injury. The aim of the study was to quantify the effectiveness of a streamlined (and thus potentially sustainable and cost-effective), population-based, multifactorial falls injury prevention program for people over 60 years of age. Methods: Population-based falls-prevention interventions were conducted at two geographically-defined and separate Australian sites: Wide Bay, Queensland, and Northern Rivers, NSW. Changes in the prevalence of key risk factors and changes in rates of injury outcomes within each community were compared before and after program implementation and changes in rates of injury outcomes in each community were also compared with the rates in their respective States. Results: The interventions in neither community substantially decreased the rate of falls-related injury among people aged 60 years or older, although there was some evidence of reductions in occurrence of multiple falls reported by women. In addition, there was some indication of improvements in fall-related risk factors, but the magnitudes were generally modest. Conclusions: The evidence suggests that low intensity population-based falls prevention programs may not be as effective as those that are intensively implemented.
Peer Reviewed Yes
Published Yes
Alternative URI http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-10-79
Copyright Statement Copyright 2010 McClure, et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Volume 10
Issue Number 79
Page from 1
Page to 10
ISSN 1471-2458
Date Accessioned 2010-09-29
Date Available 2011-01-31T07:00:02Z
Language en_AU
Comments Page numbers are not for citation purposes. Instead, this article has the unique article number of 10:79.
Faculty Griffith Health Faculty
Subject Medical and Health Sciences
URI http://hdl.handle.net/10072/34670
Publication Type Journal Articles (Refereed Article)
Publication Type Code c1

Brief Record

Griffith University copyright notice