A single home visit by an occupational therapist reduces the risk of falling after hip fracture in elderly women: a quasi-randomized controlled trial.

Authors

  • Marco Di Monaco
  • Fulvia Vallero
  • Elena De Toma
  • Lucia De Lauso
  • Rosa Tappero
  • Alberto Cavanna

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.2340/16501977-0206

Keywords:

falls, hip fracture, home visit, occupational therapy, rehabilitation.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To assess the effectiveness of a single home visit by an occupational therapist in the reduction of fall risk after hip fracture in elderly women. DESIGN: Quasi-randomized controlled trial. PARTICIPANTS: Ninety-five women aged 60 years or older, living in the community, who sustained a fall-related hip fracture. METHODS: The women were allocated alternately to intervention or control groups. All the women underwent a multidisciplinary programme targeted at fall prevention during in-patient rehabilitation. Additionally, the intervention group received a home visit by an occupational therapist a median of 20 days after discharge. Falls were recorded at a 6-month follow-up. RESULTS: Thirteen of the 50 women in the control group sustained 20 falls during 9231 days, whereas 6 of the 45 women in the intervention group sustained 9 falls during 8970 days. After adjustment for observation periods, Barthel Index scores, and body height, a significantly lower proportion of fallers was found in the intervention group: the odds ratio was 0.275 (95% confidence interval 0.081-0.937, p=0.039). CONCLUSION: A single home visit by an occupational therapist after discharge from a rehabilitation hospital significantly reduced the risk of falling in a sample of elderly women following hip fracture.

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Published

2008-06-05

How to Cite

Di Monaco, M., Vallero, F., De Toma, E., De Lauso, L., Tappero, R., & Cavanna, A. (2008). A single home visit by an occupational therapist reduces the risk of falling after hip fracture in elderly women: a quasi-randomized controlled trial. Journal of Rehabilitation Medicine, 40(6), 446–450. https://doi.org/10.2340/16501977-0206

Issue

Section

Original Report