Vitamin D supplementation can reduce falls in nursing care facilities
Giving people living in nursing facilities vitamin D can reduce the rate of falls, according to a new Cochrane Review. This finding comes from a study of many different interventions used in different situations. In hospitals, multifactorial interventions and supervised exercise programs also showed benefit. Older people living in nursing facilities or who have been admitted to hospital are much more likely to suffer a fall than those living in the community. In these settings, falls fairly often result in head injuries and fractures, with rates of hip fracture more than ten times higher in nursing facilities than in the community. It is important to try to prevent falls to avoid unnecessary stress for older people and their families, and to reduce pressure on staff and resources. However, prevention is complicated as falls usually happen for several or many different reasons.
"Many of the preventive measures used to avoid falls in older people are combined in what are called multifactorial interventions, so it can be very difficult to separate out the effects of all the different measures," said lead researcher Ian Cameron, who is based at Sydney Medical School at the University of Sydney in Ryde, Australia.
The current review included 41 trials involving 25,422 older people, who were mostly women. Five trials tested the effects of giving vitamin D to patients in nursing facilities, where it was found to be an effective measure for preventing falls. The researchers found that multifactorial interventions, which often incorporated exercise, medication, or environmental factors including appropriate equipment, reduced the risk of falls in hospitals. In nursing homes, the effects of multifactorial interventions were not significant overall. However, the researchers concluded that multifactorial interventions provided by multidisciplinary teams in these facilities may reduce the rate and risk of falls.
"In our review, we saw limited evidence that these combined interventions work, but we could more confidently recommend them if they were delivered by a multidisciplinary team," said Cameron. "Currently, there's no one component of any of these programmes that stands out as more important than any other and we're also missing data on whether increased supervision or new technologies such as alarm systems are of any benefit."
Source: Wiley-Blackwell
Related
- Exercise reduces falls in older peopleTue, 14 Apr 2009, 23:43:22 EDT
- Vitamin supplements reduce deaths caused by measles and diarrheaTue, 7 Dec 2010, 21:33:15 EST
- Over 65s should take high dose vitamin D to prevent falls, say researchersThu, 1 Oct 2009, 20:23:04 EDT
- Rate of falls in hospitals significantly reduced after use of intervention for fall preventionTue, 2 Nov 2010, 11:34:06 EDT
- Nursing homes save millions using care improvement program, MU researcher findsWed, 13 May 2009, 10:44:42 EDT
Other sources
- Vitamin D supplementation can reduce falls in nursing care facilitiesfrom Science CentricWed, 20 Jan 2010, 9:07:11 EST
- Vitamin D supplementation can reduce falls in nursing care facilitiesfrom PhysorgWed, 20 Jan 2010, 6:56:35 EST
Latest Science Newsletter
Get the latest and most popular science news articles of the week in your Inbox! It's free!Learn more about
Check out our next project, Biology.Net
Popular science news articles
- 2 miniature spider species discovered in Giant Panda Sanctuaries of China
- Researchers reveal model of Sun's magnetic field
- The Norway spruce genome sequenced
- UCLA life scientists present new insights on climate change and species interactions
- Bacterial spare parts filter antibiotic residue from groundwater
- Allosaurus fed more like a falcon than a crocodile, new study finds
- Invasive crazy ants are displacing fire ants in areas throughout southeastern US
- Beautiful 'flowers' self-assemble in a beaker
- Scientific insurgents say 'Journal Impact Factors' distort science
- GPS solution provides 3-minute tsunami alerts