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Sensory impairment in hip-fracture patients 65 years or older and effects of hearing/vision interventions on fall frequency

AIM: Examine the effect of nursing interventions to improve vision and hearing, systematic assessment, and referral to sensory specialists on falling. METHODS: Controlled intervention trial targeting hip fracture patients, 65 years and older, living at home and having problems seeing/reading regular...

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Autores principales: Grue, Else V, Kirkevold, Marit, Mowinchel, Petter, Ranhoff, Anette H
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Dove Medical Press 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3004562/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21197343
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author Grue, Else V
Kirkevold, Marit
Mowinchel, Petter
Ranhoff, Anette H
author_facet Grue, Else V
Kirkevold, Marit
Mowinchel, Petter
Ranhoff, Anette H
author_sort Grue, Else V
collection PubMed
description AIM: Examine the effect of nursing interventions to improve vision and hearing, systematic assessment, and referral to sensory specialists on falling. METHODS: Controlled intervention trial targeting hip fracture patients, 65 years and older, living at home and having problems seeing/reading regular print (VI) or hearing normal speech (HI). Intervention group = 200, control group = 131. The InterRAI-AcuteCare (RAI-AC) and the Combined-Serious-Sensory-Impairment interview guide (KAS-Screen) were used. Follow-up telephone calls were done every third month for one year. RESULTS: Mean age was 84.2 years, 79.8% were female, and 76.7% lived alone. HI was detected in 80.7% and VI in 59.8%. Falling was more frequent among the intervention group (P = 0.003) and they also more often moved to a nursing home (P < 0.001) and were dependent walking up stairs (P = 0.003). CONCLUSIONS: This study could not document the effect of intervention on falling, possibly because of different base line characteristics (more females, P = 0.018, and more living alone P = 0.011 in the intervention group), differences in nursing care between subjects, and different risk factors. Interventions to improve sensory function remain important in rehabilitation, but have to be studied further.
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spelling pubmed-30045622010-12-30 Sensory impairment in hip-fracture patients 65 years or older and effects of hearing/vision interventions on fall frequency Grue, Else V Kirkevold, Marit Mowinchel, Petter Ranhoff, Anette H J Multidiscip Healthc Original Research AIM: Examine the effect of nursing interventions to improve vision and hearing, systematic assessment, and referral to sensory specialists on falling. METHODS: Controlled intervention trial targeting hip fracture patients, 65 years and older, living at home and having problems seeing/reading regular print (VI) or hearing normal speech (HI). Intervention group = 200, control group = 131. The InterRAI-AcuteCare (RAI-AC) and the Combined-Serious-Sensory-Impairment interview guide (KAS-Screen) were used. Follow-up telephone calls were done every third month for one year. RESULTS: Mean age was 84.2 years, 79.8% were female, and 76.7% lived alone. HI was detected in 80.7% and VI in 59.8%. Falling was more frequent among the intervention group (P = 0.003) and they also more often moved to a nursing home (P < 0.001) and were dependent walking up stairs (P = 0.003). CONCLUSIONS: This study could not document the effect of intervention on falling, possibly because of different base line characteristics (more females, P = 0.018, and more living alone P = 0.011 in the intervention group), differences in nursing care between subjects, and different risk factors. Interventions to improve sensory function remain important in rehabilitation, but have to be studied further. Dove Medical Press 2008-11-06 /pmc/articles/PMC3004562/ /pubmed/21197343 Text en © 2009 Grue et al, publisher and licensee Dove Medical Press Ltd. This is an Open Access article which permits unrestricted noncommercial use, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Research
Grue, Else V
Kirkevold, Marit
Mowinchel, Petter
Ranhoff, Anette H
Sensory impairment in hip-fracture patients 65 years or older and effects of hearing/vision interventions on fall frequency
title Sensory impairment in hip-fracture patients 65 years or older and effects of hearing/vision interventions on fall frequency
title_full Sensory impairment in hip-fracture patients 65 years or older and effects of hearing/vision interventions on fall frequency
title_fullStr Sensory impairment in hip-fracture patients 65 years or older and effects of hearing/vision interventions on fall frequency
title_full_unstemmed Sensory impairment in hip-fracture patients 65 years or older and effects of hearing/vision interventions on fall frequency
title_short Sensory impairment in hip-fracture patients 65 years or older and effects of hearing/vision interventions on fall frequency
title_sort sensory impairment in hip-fracture patients 65 years or older and effects of hearing/vision interventions on fall frequency
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3004562/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21197343
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