Accidental Falls Clinical Trial
Official title:
Safe-Grip Fall/Injuries Intervention: A Randomized Trial
Falls are the leading cause of nonfatal injuries in the United States and the second leading cause of all unintentional injury deaths. Each year fractures of the hip account for about 200,000 hospitalizations among the elderly and falls are contributing factors in 40 percent of admissions to nursing homes. About 30 percent of community-dwelling elderly fall each year, with about 10 percent seeking emergency medical help for a fall injury. Data from CDC-funded study to assess falls among the elderly (SAFE) suggest that as many as 41 percent of elderly patients fall at home in the year following discharge from hospitalization due in part to deconditioning associated with inactivity.
Background:
Falls are the leading cause of nonfatal injuries in the United States and the second leading
cause of all unintentional injury deaths. Each year fractures of the hip account for about
200,000 hospitalizations among the elderly and falls are contributing factors in 40 percent
of admissions to nursing homes. About 30 percent of community-dwelling elderly fall each
year, with about 10 percent seeking emergency medical help for a fall injury. Data from
CDC-funded study to assess falls among the elderly (SAFE) suggest that as many as 41 percent
of elderly patients fall at home in the year following discharge from hospitalization due in
part to deconditioning associated with inactivity.
Objectives:
The controlled trial of a physical restoration (PR) intervention (Geriatric Rehabilitation
Intensive Program, SAFE-GRIP) is designed to improve physical functional capacity and to
reduce the likelihood of falls in the elderly during the period following discharge from
hospitalization or inactivity/bed rest.
Methods:
This is a four year randomized trial of SAFE-GRIP, designed to improve the physical
functional capacity, to reduce the likelihood of falls and to decrease the chance of injury
from falls. Patients at home or recently discharged to home will be randomly assigned to one
of two groups, PR or control, upon receiving medical clearance (time=0). This project will
provide mechanisms to establish well-designed innovative physical restoration (PR) protocols
for the Miami VAMC and test the effects of these interventions on the rate of
falling/sustaining injuries and their sequelae at home. Our anticipated sample was 105 males
and 105 females aged 60+ years inactive at home or recently discharged to home from the
Miami VAMC and a neighboring community hospital. Study participants will be randomly
assigned to one of two groups, PR or control, upon receiving medical clearance. Baseline
measures of physical function, health care utilization, ADL/IADL performance and
health-related quality of life will be taken following assignment to treatment conditions.
These same measures will be taken again at eight weeks following medical clearance, and
again at six months. The incidence of falls will be tracked throughout the funding period
for each subject. Self-report of the number of falls in the year prior to hospitalization,
an assessment of in-home hazards, and an assessment of participants' post-hospitalization
medication regimen will be obtained at the baseline assessment and used as covariates in the
analysis of outcomes.
Status:
All subjects have completed the study intervention phase. The projected submission date of
the final report is September 30, 2001. Analysis of the prospectively collected study data
is underway. We have acquired the HCFA Denominator Files, and Inpatient Files, and Part B
Provider Service Files for the years 1997, 1998, and 1999. The extraction of 1997, 1998, and
1999 Part B Provider Service Files is almost complete and the analysis of the Inpatient
Files is underway.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety Study, Intervention Model: Factorial Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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