Theodore M Johnson, Jennifer L Vincenzo, Bryanna De Lima, Colleen M Casey, Shelly Gray, Siobhan K McMahon, Elizabeth A Phelan, Elizabeth Eckstrom
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摘要

2012 年,美国疾病控制和预防中心(CDC)发布了 STEADI(制止老年人意外事故、死亡和伤害)工具包,该工具包以 2011 年美国老年医学会/英国老年医学会(AGS/BGS)预防跌倒指南为基础。2024 年,国家公共卫生研究所网络 (NNPHI) 通过与美国卫生与公众服务部 (HHS) 的疾病预防控制中心 (CDC) 合作,邀请 AGS 对 STEADI 提出更新建议,重点关注初级保健中的跌倒预防。AGS 工作组审查了 2022/2024 年的出版物,并与利益相关者(448 人参加)举行了三次外联活动,以获得对当前 STEADI 材料和以初级保健为重点的建议草案的反馈意见。提高 STEADI 使用率的建议包括重构 "为什么"(与行走目标保持一致)和 "如何做"(让所有可用的跨学科团队成员参与进来),以及通过优先考虑可在可用时间内完成的 STEADI 要素和在多次就诊中完成评估来解决时间限制问题。筛查建议包括首先使用 "三个关键问题",只有当结果呈阳性时,才询问其余的 "保持独立 "问题。评估建议是限制某些活动的范围(例如,专门考虑增加跌倒风险的药物),同时扩大其他活动的范围(例如,纳入听力和膀胱健康评估)。如果干预措施的选择从筛查中显而易见(例如,如果筛查问题指向力量、活动能力或步态问题,则转介给理疗师),则可以合理地跳过诊室评估。这些建议可以提高 STEADI 在初级保健中的有效性和易实施性,并帮助初级保健团队将预防跌倒重新定义为一种慢性疾病,值得持续参与、评估、干预和随访。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Updating STEADI for Primary Care: Recommendations From the American Geriatrics Society Workgroup.

In 2012, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) released STEADI (Stopping Elderly Accidents, Deaths and Injuries) toolkit which is based on the 2011 American Geriatrics Society/British Geriatrics Society (AGS/BGS) fall prevention guideline. In 2024, the National Network of Public Health Institutes (NNPHI), via a Cooperative Award with the CDC of the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), invited AGS to recommend updates to STEADI with a focus on falls prevention in primary care. An AGS workgroup reviewed the 2022/2024 publications and held three outreach events with stakeholders (448 participants) to get feedback on current STEADI materials and draft recommendations focused on primary care. Recommendations for improving uptake of STEADI included reframing the why (alignment with ambulation goals) and the how (engage all available interdisciplinary team members) and addressing time limitations by prioritizing STEADI elements that can be done with available time and completing assessments across multiple visits. Screening recommendations included using the Three Key Questions first, and only if positive, asking the remaining Stay Independent questions. Assessment recommendations were to limit the scope of some activities (e.g., consider specifically fall risk-increasing drugs) while expanding others (e.g., incorporating hearing and bladder health assessments). Where the choice of intervention is obvious from screening (e.g., referral to a physical therapist if screening questions points to a strength, mobility, or gait problem), an in-office assessment may reasonably be skipped. These recommendations could improve effectiveness and ease of implementation of STEADI in primary care and help primary care teams reframe fall prevention as a chronic condition deserving ongoing engagement, assessment, intervention, and follow-up.

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