Publication | Open Access
Preventing Falls in the Geriatric Population
51
Citations
3
References
2013
Year
AgingNursing HomeFall Risk AssessmentInjury PreventionGeriatric MedicineEpidemiology Of AgingLongevityInterdisciplinary TeamsGeriatric PopulationGeriatric Fracture CarePublic HealthHealth Services ResearchFall RiskPatient FallsFall PreventionHealth SciencesPost-surgical RecoveryGeriatricsHealth PolicyStrike FearMost PeopleElderly CareGlobal AgingHome HealthcarePatient SafetyTrauma TriageMedicineEmergency Medicine
The word “fall” does not usually strike fear in the hearts of most people. But it should. Falls are all too common in the geriatric population, and they have devastating consequences. They are the leading cause of injury and death by injury in adults over the age of 65 years.1 One of 3 community-dwelling older adults falls each year, with 24% of those who fall sustaining serious injuries and 6% sustaining fractures.2 In the year 2000, falls cost the US health care system more than $19 billion, a number that is expected to increase to $54.9 billion by 2020.3 A person who falls may subsequently experience pain, hospitalization, surgical intervention, admission to a nursing home, decreased overall functional ability, poorer quality of life, or a fear of falling.
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