Risk factors for falls in older adults with a history of recurrent falls: a 1-year longitudinal study

Abstract ID
4163
Authors' names
ALO Dias1, FS Orlandi1, D Morais1, LF Talmelli-Ruy1, MG Cezar1, J Reis1, K Gramani-Say1, JH Ansai1
Author's provenances
1. Department of Gerontology, Federal University of São Carlos, UFSCar, Brazil
Abstract category
Abstract sub-category

Abstract

Introduction: Older adults with a history of recurrent falls present distinct characteristics that may influence future fall events. Identifying which factors are associated with subsequent falls is essential for targeted prevention.

Objective: To describe fall outcomes over 12 months among older adults with a history of recurrent falls and to identify factors associated with the occurrence of falls during this period.

Methods: A prospective study was conducted with 49 community-dwelling older adults (≥60 years) with a history of at least two falls in the previous year. Data included clinical and sociodemographic characteristics at baseline. Falls were monitored monthly over 12 months to determine whether participants experienced any fall during follow-up.

Results: Over the 12-month period, 33 participants (67.3%) experienced at least one fall. Sex, number of medications, use of psychotropic drugs, and fear of falling were factors associated with having fallen during follow-up .According to the regression analysis, the strongest influences were being male (p=0,008) followed by using psychotropic medications (p=<0,001), greater concern about falling(p=0,006), and number of medications (p=0,008).

Conclusion: In older adults with a history of recurrent falls, the likelihood of experiencing a fall over 12 months is associated with sex, number of medications, use of psychotropic drugs, and fear of falling. These findings emphasize the importance of evaluating both clinical and psychological factors to inform fall-prevention strategies. FAPESP (2024/10699-6), CNPq (408323/2024-8), CAPES (001).

Comments

Hi,

This was an interesting piece of work- thanks. Did you screen for dizziness or vestibular dysfunction as a risk factor for recurrent falls? It would be interesting to see if this was another risk factor, as previous studies have found a significant correlation.

Many thanks,

Ed Tank

Submitted by ed.tank_21593 on

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Dear Ed Tank,

Thank you for your interest.
Unfortunately, we did not screen for dizziness or vestibular dysfunction. We analyzed clinical (body mass index, bi or multifocal glasses, diseases, psychotropic drugs, medications, hospitalization, history of falls, general health, fracture risk, home  safety,  physical functions,  functional  capacity, physical  activity), sociodemographic (age, sex, race, marital status, education, monthly income, living alone) and neuropsychological (memory complaints, depressive symptoms, fear of falling, anxiety levels and cognitive functions) factors.
Regards,
Juliana Ansai (jhansai [at] ufscar.br)