More older adults are reporting falls

rockin'robin

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Since the late 1990s, almost 30 percent more adults age 65 and older are likely to say they have had a recent fall, according to a new study.

The rise – from 28 percent of seniors reporting a fall in 1998, to 36 percent in 2010 – may be due in part to increased awareness of fall risks, but it is not just a result of the population aging, study authors say.

“Initially, I presumed our findings would just be due to the fact the older adult population itself is aging and there are more 80 and 90 year-olds, but when we looked at the data closely, it turned out there was increased self-reporting of falls across all ages,” said Dr. Christine Cigolle at the University of Michigan Medical School in Ann Arbor, who led the study.

“So we looked at individual ages - 65, 66, 67, etcetera, and there was an increase in reporting of falls across all ages from about 65 into the late 80s, and in fact it was somewhat more marked in the ‘young old’ versus the ‘oldest old,’” Cigolle told Reuters Health in an interview.

Falling is the most common cause of injury among older adults, and other research also shows that about one of every three older Americans falls each year, Cigolle and her colleagues write in JAMA Internal Medicine.

For their study, Cigolle's team analyzed data from the Health and Retirement Study, a large survey of middle-aged and older Americans conducted every two years. The researchers looked at surveys done from 1998 to 2010 and tallied participants’ reports of having fallen at any time in the period between surveys.

In the 1998 survey, 28.2 percent of seniors reported a fall in the past two years. That percentage steadily rose until 2010, when 36 percent reported a fall. But the increase was almost exclusively among seniors younger than 85, the authors note.

Cigolle noted that the findings were not influenced by gender, income, specific diseases or disability. “This increased self-reporting of falls was fairly pervasive across all categories, we didn’t find an easy answer to explain why older adults are saying they're falling more,” she said.

“It could be that older adults are more aware of falling,” Cigolle said. “There have been different awareness campaigns and interventions to make older adults aware so it may be in part due to better self-reporting on the part of older adults.”

It could also be that older adults are engaging in riskier behaviors than in the past and participating in activities that make it more likely for them to fall, she added.

A third possibility is that aggressive medical management of conditions and diseases such as hypertension and heart disease may be contributing to fall risk, Cigolle said.

“Physicians can be pretty aggressive with medications and certainly there are many medications that can affect different aspects of mobility and we know can lead to increased falling,” she said.

“What it really was saying was that universally, patients that are 65 to 89 years old are really at a higher risk for falls,” said Dr. Jessica Zwerling, a neurologist at Montefiore Medical Center in New York.

“Most of us really have the idea that it’s only the oldest old that will fall, but actually in this study it was the opposite, that it’s universal to no age, no demographic and no disease correlates, so it’s a very important study,” said Zwerling, who is assistant director of the Einstein Center for the Aging Brain and was not involved in the new study.

Zwerling said the study emphasizes the importance of identifying patients who may be at a risk for falling at an earlier age, in order to prevent falls.

It’s also important to get checked by a doctor after you’ve fallen, she said. “As we get older the brain can get smaller, so the bridging veins can have small bleeds and patients may need to be screened cognitively with an examination as well as imaging to look for subtle chronic subdural hematomas that can interfere with walking and cognition and cause chronic complaints,” she said.

Zwerling noted that after falling, patients may develop a fear of falling again, and that fear actually becomes a risk factor for future falls.

She added that it’s important to think about safety, such as making sure areas are well lit, using higher toilet seats and identifying other risk factors around the home.

Cigolle also encouraged older adults and their families to be aware of things about the environment that could lead to falls, slips and trips, such as throw rugs and furniture that might block walking pathways. She also suggests speaking with physicians about any medications that might increase the older person’s risk of falling.

http://news.yahoo.com/more-older-adults-reporting-falls-213437280.html
 
I have been fortunate enough to be still agile enough and haven't had a major fall.......(knocking on wood)....
 
My doctor always asks me..."Have you fallen?"....(beginning to sound like a broken record)...but I know he means well!....I am careful, especially with my balance issues, and so far, no falls. I always have rubber-backing for my throw rugs, especially at the door....and my little doggie...:giggle:...she knows my balance issues and always backs off...our Cat?...not so much. Just lays there and I've tripped over her several times...(lots of cussing on my part)...she's just too lazy to move and at times I don't see her laying down on a black rug as she is black and white herself (a Tuxedo).
 
Yes sad. I brought my kids (when they were small) to the ice cream place. After we picked up ice cream cones, and have kids in my car. We are chatting in the car. I spotted the elder lady was busy licking the icre cream, and all of a sudden, she fell down.. Apparently she was in pain with her arm. I wasnt sure if its broken or not. :( I couldn't get out of my car because of someone were coming to her. My kids were in my car that i cant leave them alone with many people. Glad someone and more came and checked on her fast. Poor her.
 
Well, I hate to say it but I'm in the fall group. I was 61 with my first bad fall, being careless on the cellar stairs, running up the stairs, missed my footing and fell over the side to the cement floor below, putting my arms out to break my fall. Broke many bones in one shoulder, still have pain in the other shoulder to this day, not the one with broken bones. I am way more careful now 10 years later.

My husband had a fall in the garage recently, tripped over some things he had taken out of the trunk of the car. No serious damage, bloody forehead and a black eye.
 
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I had 2 falls in last 6 months one was having nasty meniors attack.. It always plays on my mind,The dr got it right ,fear of falling cause more problems than falling....good article thanks for posting
 
I have a neighbor that had a real bad fall , she broke her foot and been in rehab for almost 6 weeks . I saw her yesterday and she coming back home and live on the second floor . I almost tripped on a crack in our driveway I had my cane and that kept me from falling . Fall is a 4 letters word .
 
Well, I hate to say it but I'm in the fall group. I was 61 with my first bad fall, being careless on the cellar stairs, running up the stairs, missed my footing and fell over the side to the cement floor below, putting my arms out to break my fall. Broke many bones in one shoulder, still have pain in the other shoulder to this day, not the one with broken bones. I am way more careful now 10 years later.

My husband had a fall in the garage recently, tripped over some things he had taken out of the trunk of the car. No serious damage, bloody forehead and a black eye.

Ouch!
 
My worst fall ever happened in the laundry room. A dryer sheet was on the floor and I walked in there in my socks. Feet went out from under me and I smacked my head on the floor super hard. This happed many years ago so I was still "young" and had no lasting issues. Super cautious now, making sure all dryer sheets end up in the trash.
 
My worst fall ever happened in the laundry room. A dryer sheet was on the floor and I walked in there in my socks. Feet went out from under me and I smacked my head on the floor super hard. This happed many years ago so I was still "young" and had no lasting issues. Super cautious now, making sure all dryer sheets end up in the trash.

Yikes! you were lucky you were not hurt or have a concussion!
 
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