4.7 Article

Do home adaptation interventions help to reduce emergency fall admissions? A national longitudinal data-linkage study of 657,536 older adults living in Wales (UK) between 2010 and 2017

Journal

AGE AND AGEING
Volume 51, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/ageing/afab201

Keywords

older people; falls prevention; frailty; falls

Funding

  1. Health and Care Research Wales [HRG16-1325, SCF-18-1504]
  2. Dunhill Medical Trust [BEHA\41]
  3. Health Data Research UK from HDR UK Ltd - UK Medical Research Council [HDR-9006]
  4. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council
  5. Economic and Social Research Council
  6. Department of Health and Social Care (England)
  7. Chief Scientist Office of the Scottish GovernmentHealth and Social CareDirectorates
  8. Health and Social Care Research and Development Division (Welsh Government)
  9. Public Health Agency (Northern Ireland)
  10. British Heart Foundation (BHF)
  11. Wellcome Trust
  12. ADR Wales Programme
  13. Economic and Social Research Council (UK Research and Innovation) [ES/S007393/1]
  14. Wales School for Social Care Research - Health and Care Research

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The study found that the Care&Repair Cymru home adaptation service can identify and reduce the likelihood of falls occurring at home in older people. Factors such as female gender, older age, increased frailty, and deprivation increase the risk of falls, while the odds of falling decrease post-intervention.
Background falls are common in older people, but evidence for the effectiveness of preventative home adaptations is limited. Aim determine whether a national home adaptation service, Care&Repair Cymru (C&RC), identified individuals at risk of falls occurring at home and reduced the likelihood of falls. Study Design retrospective longitudinal controlled non-randomised intervention cohort study. Setting our cohort consisted of 657,536 individuals aged 60+ living in Wales (UK) between 1 January 2010 and 31 December 2017. About 123,729 individuals received a home adaptation service. Methods we created a dataset with up to 41 quarterly observations per person. For each quarter, we observed if a fall occurred at home that resulted in either an emergency department or an emergency hospital admission. We analysed the data using multilevel logistic regression. Results compared to the control group, C&RC clients had higher odds of falling, with an odds ratio (OR [95% confidence interval]) of 1.93 [1.87, 2.00]. Falls odds was higher for females (1.44 [1.42, 1.46]), older age (1.07 [1.07, 1.07]), increased frailty (mild 1.57 [1.55, 1.60], moderate 2.31 [2.26, 2.35], severe 3.05 [2.96, 3.13]), and deprivation (most deprived compared to least: 1.16 [1.13, 1.19]). Client fall odds decreased post-intervention; OR 0.97 [0.96, 0.97] per quarter. Regional variation existed for falls (5.8%), with most variation at the individual level (31.3%). Conclusions C&RC identified people more likely to have an emergency fall admission occurring at home, and their service reduced the odds of falling post-intervention. Service provisioning should meet the needs of an individual and need varies by personal and regional circumstance.

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