预防严重跌倒伤害的策略:对Bhasin等人的评论。预防严重跌倒损伤的多因素随机试验中华医学杂志,2020;32(2):129-140。

Advances in geriatric medicine and research Pub Date : 2021-01-01 Epub Date: 2020-11-14 DOI:10.20900/agmr20210002
Brian C Clark, W David Arnold
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引用次数: 6

摘要

在美国,每天每秒钟都有一名老年人跌倒(每年有超过3000万老年人跌倒)。其中20%以上的摔伤造成严重伤害(例如骨折、头部受伤),每年造成80万人住院,3万人死亡。Bhasin和他的同事最近报道了一项实用的集群随机试验的结果,该试验旨在评估多因素干预预防跌倒损伤的有效性。与增强的常规护理相比,干预并没有导致跌倒损伤风险增加的老年人首次确诊严重跌倒损伤的发生率显著降低。在这篇评论中,我们简要回顾和强调这些最近的发现。此外,我们认为研究结果不应该仅仅因为缺乏统计显著性而打折扣。与增强的常规护理相比,大约减少了10%,可以说,在个人和公共卫生水平上都是有意义的,特别是当人们考虑到对照组的结果比基于先前工作的预期要好时。此外,我们鼓励未来的研究以及从业者对运动干预的细微差别给予强烈的考虑,以减少跌倒和跌倒相关的伤害,特别是当它涉及到运动计划的细节,即强度和体积,以增强神经肌肉功能,以及神经康复方法以增强运动功能(例如,平衡,运动计划和协调)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Strategies to Prevent Serious Fall Injuries: A Commentary on Bhasin et al. A Randomized Trial of a Multifactorial Strategy to Prevent Serious Fall Injuries. N Engl J Med. 2020;383(2):129-140.

Every second of every day, an older adult suffers a fall in the United States (>30 million older adults fall each year). More than 20% of these falls cause serious injury (e.g., broken bones, head injury) and result in 800,000 hospitalizations and 30,000 deaths annually. Bhasin and colleagues recently reported results from a pragmatic, cluster-randomized trial designed to evaluate the effectiveness of a multifactorial intervention to prevent fall injuries. The intervention did not result in a significantly lower rate of a first adjudicated serious fall injury among older adults at increased risk for fall injuries as compared with enhanced usual care. In this commentary we briefly review and highlight these recent findings. Additionally, we argue that the findings should not be discounted just because of the lack of statistical significance. The approximately 10% reduction compared to enhanced usual care is, arguably, meaningful at both the individual and public health level, especially when one considers that the control group had better outcomes than expected based on prior work. Moreover, we encourage future research as well as practitioners to give strong consideration to the nuances of the exercise interventions for reducing falls and fall-related injuries particularly as it relates to exercise programming specifics, namely intensity and volume, to enhance neuromuscular function and also to neurorehabilitation approaches to enhance motor function (e.g., balance, motor planning, and coordination).

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