The association between delirium and falls in older adults in the community: a systematic review

Charlotte Eost-Telling, Lucy McNally, Yang Yang, Chunhu Shi, Gill Norman, Saima Ahmed, Brenda Poku, Annemarie Money, Helen Hawley-Hague, Susan D Shenkin, Chris Todd, Emma R.L.C. Vardy
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Abstract

Objective: Systematically review and critically appraise evidence for the association between delirium and falls in community-dwelling adults aged 60 years and above Methods: We searched EMBASE, MEDLINE, PsycINFO, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, CINAHL and Evidence-Based Medicine Reviews (EBMR) databases in April 2023. Standard methods were used to screen, extract data, assess risk of bias (using Newcastle Ottawa scale), provide a narrative synthesis and where appropriate conduct meta-analysis. Results: We included eight studies, with at least 3505 unique participants. Five found limited evidence for an association between delirium and subsequent falls: one adjusted study showed an increase in falls (RR 6.66;95% CI 2.16-20.53) but the evidence was low certainty. Four non-adjusted studies found no clear effect. Three studies (one with two subgroups treated separately) found some evidence for an association between falls and subsequent delirium: meta-analysis of three adjusted studies showed an increase in delirium (pooled OR 2.01; 95%CI 1.52-2.66), one subgroup of non-adjusted data found no clear effect. Number of falls and fallers were reported in the studies. Four studies and one subgroup were at high risk of bias and one study had some concerns. Conclusions: We found limited evidence for the association between delirium and falls. More methodologically rigorous research is needed to understand the complex relationship, establish how and why this operates bi-directionally and identify potential modifying factors involved. We recommend the use of standardised assessment measures for delirium and falls. Clinicians should be aware of the potential relationship between these common presentations.
社区老年人谵妄与跌倒之间的关系:系统性综述
目的系统回顾并批判性评估 60 岁及以上居住在社区的成年人谵妄与跌倒之间关系的证据方法:我们检索了 EMBASE、MEDLINE、PsycINFO、Cochrane 系统综述数据库、CINAHL 和循证医学综述(EBMR)数据库:我们检索了 2023 年 4 月的 EMBASE、MEDLINE、PsycINFO、Cochrane 系统综述数据库、CINAHL 和循证医学综述 (EBMR) 数据库。我们使用标准方法筛选、提取数据、评估偏倚风险(使用纽卡斯尔-渥太华量表)、提供叙述性综述,并酌情进行荟萃分析:我们纳入了八项研究,至少有 3505 名参与者。其中五项研究发现了谵妄与随后跌倒之间存在关联的有限证据:一项调整后的研究显示跌倒率有所上升(RR 6.66;95% CI 2.16-20.53),但证据的确定性较低。四项非调整研究未发现明显影响。三项研究(其中一项研究对两个亚组分别进行了处理)发现了跌倒与随后的谵妄之间存在关联的一些证据:对三项调整后研究进行的荟萃分析表明,谵妄的发生率有所上升(汇总 OR 2.01;95%CI 1.52-2.66),对一个亚组的非调整数据进行分析后发现没有明确的影响。研究报告了跌倒人数和跌倒者人数。四项研究和一个亚组存在高偏倚风险,一项研究存在一些问题。结论我们发现谵妄与跌倒之间的关联证据有限。我们需要在方法上进行更严格的研究,以了解这种复杂的关系,确定其双向作用的方式和原因,并找出潜在的影响因素。我们建议使用标准化的谵妄和跌倒评估方法。临床医生应了解这些常见症状之间的潜在关系。
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