Accidental Falls Clinical Trial
Official title:
NIH-NIA SBIR Phase I/II Study: Clinical Evaluation of a Device to Reduce Patient Falls
Falls are a public health problem of significant social and economic significance. No primary intervention devices have been shown to be effective in reducing falls and associated injuries. The objective of this study was to determine whether the new wireless FallSaver device reduces falls and fall-related injuries in elderly skilled nursing facility (SNF) residents. A randomized, prospective, open-label, cross-over study was conducted over a six-month period. The FallSaver device reduced the frequency of falls by 50% and fall-related injuries by 82% in 43 elderly at-risk SNF residents studied over 4,222 patient-days. The device and associated patch enclosure was well tolerated and devoid of serious problems. Significant cost savings and fewer reductions in quality of life are possible if fall-related injuries can be reduced.
OBJECTIVE. No existing devices have proven effective in preventing falls in at-risk
individuals. The objective of this study was to determine whether the FallSaver device
reduces falls and fall-related injuries in elderly skilled nursing facility (SNF) residents.
DESIGN. This was a randomized, prospective, open-label, cross-over study conducted over a
six-month period.
SETTING: The study took place in a 100-bed State Veterans SNF in Washington State.
PARTICIPANTS. Forty-four subjects with anticipated institutional stays of at least 120 days
participated in the study. The subjects’ mean age was 82.2 + 7.1 years and all were rated
high fall risks using the Morse scale.
INTERVENTION Subjects were randomly assigned to the FallSaver device or no device
(Observation) for 60 days. Following the end of the 60-day period subjects were crossed over
to the opposite treatment. The device, enclosed in an adhesive patch, was applied to the
subject’s thigh.
MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE The primary outcome measures were falls and fall-related injuries.
Secondary outcomes were falls resulting from documented attempts to stand or ambulate
without assistance, skin-tolerance to the patch, and compliance.
RESULTS. Total patient-days for the FallSaver and Observation phases were 1,923 and 2,299,
respectively. A total of 37 falls occurred in 18 subjects. Thirteen falls occurred during
the FallSaver phase and 24 during Observation (p = < 0.05). A total of 7 fall-related
injuries occurred; one during the FallSaver phase and 6 during Observation (p = < 0.01).
Nineteen falls resulted from documented attempts to stand or ambulate without assistance,
six during the FallSaver phase and 13 during Observation (p = < 0.05). The patch was well
tolerated and no serious adverse effects were observed.
CONCLUSION. The FallSaver device reduced the frequency of falls by 50% and fall-related
injuries by 82% in elderly at-risk SNF residents. The device and associated patch enclosure
was well tolerated and devoid of serious problems. Significant cost savings and fewer
reductions in quality of life are possible if fall-related injuries can be reduced.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Crossover Assignment, Masking: Open Label, Primary Purpose: Prevention
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