Falls in 84- to 85-year-old people living at home

1992 
Abstract The present study is a part of the Swedish longitudinal population study “70-yearold people in Gothenburg”. The aim of the present study was to analyse retrospectively incidence, circumstances, and consequences of falls during one year among 741 home-living people aged 84–85. A comparison of social and medical characteristics of fallers and non-fallers aged 85 was performed. Information was collected by interviews and clinical examinations. In 1986/1987, 732 home-living people (244 men and 488 women), aged 85 gave information about falls during the last year. Three hundred and one (41%), 97 men and 204 women, had fallen at least once during the last year, mainly indoors. No sex difference was found in incidence. The most dominant triggering causes of falls were stumbling, dizziness, and feebleness. In 80% of the falls an injury occurred, of which every fourth was a fracture. A multivariate regression procedure showed that dizziness, vertigo and unsteadiness, transient ischemie attacks, antidepressant drugs, and poor subjectively experienced health characterized the fallers. Mortality rate of those between 85 and 88 years of age showed no association with falls.
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