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Medication Use and Falls Among Community Dwelling Seniors

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Title: Medication Use and Falls Among Community Dwelling Seniors


1
Medication Use and Falls Among Community Dwelling
Seniors
Don Voaklander, PhD Associate Professor Community
Health Sciences University of Northern British
Columbia
2
  • Epidemiology
  • The study of the distribution and determinants of
    disease and injury in human populations

3
  • Injury Epidemiology
  • Descriptive epidemiology
  • Frequency
  • Etiology (causes)
  • Analytic epidemiology
  • Risk factors
  • Outcomes

4
Haddon Matrix
5
Haddon Matrix
6
Epidemiology
  • Approximately 1/3 of persons gt65 yr. living at
    home have one or more falls per year.
  • Rate increases to 40 to 50 for persons over the
    age of 80 years
  • Fall rate ranges from 1.25 to 2 times as great
    for females as for males
  • Inconsistent findings on seasonal variation
  • Some report a greater frequency during winter
    months

7
Consequences of Falls
  • Major consequences
  • Fractures
  • Hip
  • Wrist
  • Decreased mobility
  • Psychosocial dysfunction
  • Fear of falling
  • Head injury
  • Death
  • Minor consequences
  • Bruising, lacerations

8
Etiology of Falls
  • Falls are a typically a complex interaction of a
    number of factors
  • Relating to the individual Intrinsic Factors
  • Relating to the environment Extrinsic Factors

9
Etiology of Falls (cont.)
  • Extrinsic Factors
  • Poor lighting
  • Loose stones, uneven pavement
  • Stairs
  • Loose rugs, clutter, slippery floors
  • Icy or wet surfaces
  • Women tend to fall from trips while men fall from
    slips

10
Etiology of Falls (cont.)
  • Three categories of falls (Campbell et al, 1995)
  • Fall with impairment or loss of consciousness
  • Hypotension, cardiac arrhythmias, epilepsy, etc.
  • Fall associated with acute illness
  • Postural hypotension, dehydration, medication
    use, etc.
  • Fall with impairment of gait or balance
  • Incorrect sensory input, impaired motor function,
    etc.

11
Etiology of Falls (cont.)
  • Factors related to falls
  • Physical decline in older persons
  • Decreased skeletal muscle strength
  • Decreased coordination
  • Abnormal blood pressure
  • Cardiac arrhythmia
  • Impaired mobility and balance
  • Visual deficits
  • Multiple co-morbidity
  • Medication use

12
Etiology of Falls (cont.)
  • Decreased Muscle Strength
  • Deterioration in
  • Isometric strength
  • Dynamic strength
  • Speed of muscle contraction
  • Caused by
  • Decrease in neural activity
  • Reduced muscle fiber size
  • Reduced muscle mass and cross sectional size
  • Also associated with the bodys ability of
    withstand trauma

13
Etiology of Falls (cont.)
  • Decreased Coordination
  • Gait speed declines 1.6 per year after age 65
  • Variable cadence between legs
  • Increased path deviation

14
Etiology of Falls (cont.)
  • Abnormal blood pressure
  • Orthostatic hypotension
  • Drop of 20mm of systolic BP after standing
  • 2-25 of seniors suffer from this
  • Postprandial hypotension
  • Reduction in systolic BP after meals
  • Carotid sinus hypersensitivity
  • Can cause a drop of up to 50mm of systolic BP

15
Etiology of Falls (cont.)
  • Cardiac arrhythmia
  • Inconsistent heart-rate
  • Cerebrovascular insufficiency
  • Cardiac output diminished
  • Lower blood pressure

16
Etiology of Falls (cont.)
  • Impaired mobility and balance
  • Deficits in sensory and motor functions
  • Increased trunk sway
  • Failures in the postural control mechanisms
  • Inability to stand on one leg
  • Impaired proprioception
  • Vestibular disturbances
  • Sense of imbalance even when lying down

17
Etiology of Falls (cont.)
  • Visual deficit
  • Visual field loss
  • Impaired contrast sensitivity
  • Loss of night vision
  • Weakened stereo vision
  • Lack of depth perception

18
Etiology of Falls (cont.)
  • Multiple co-morbidity
  • Depression, anxiety, insomnia, neuroses
  • Osteoroporosis, osteoarthritis
  • Cerebrovascular and cardiovascular disease
  • Cognitive impairment
  • Parkinsons disease
  • Hypertension
  • Incontinence, malnutrition, gait disorders

19
Etiology of Falls (cont.)
  • Medication Use
  • Pharmokinetics
  • Related to drug dosage, concentration and
    elimination
  • Absorption is similar to younger persons
  • Distribution, metabolism and elimination is
    affected by aging
  • Due to reduced metabolic activity and renal
    function
  • Pharmodynamics
  • How drugs react in the body
  • Increased sensitivity to drugs in older persons

20
Etiology of Falls (cont.)
  • Medication types
  • CNS Active
  • Sedatives, benzodiazapines
  • Anti-depressants
  • Anti-psychotics
  • Opiates
  • Others
  • Cardiovascular drugs
  • Anti-hypertensive medications
  • Anti-convulsants

21
The Present Study
  • Part of a series of studies of injuries and
    medication use with seniors
  • Falls in the Capital Health Region (Edmonton)
  • Narcotic pain killers, anti-depressants and
    anti-convulsants associated with falls
  • Farm related injury
  • Narcotic pain killers, NSAIDS, sedatives
    associated with injury

22
Rationale
  • The role of medications as a contributing factor
    is important
  • It is a potentially important modifiable factor.
  • However, inconsistency in the literature
  • risk of falling associated with specific classes
    of medications.

23
Objectives
  • To examine the association between medication use
    in community living persons aged gt 65 years and
    injurious falls requiring presentation to an
    Emergency Department.
  • To estimate the above magnitude while controlling
    for potential confounding of underlying medical
    conditions.

24
Methods
  • Setting Province of Alberta
  • Utilizing administrative data
  • obtained 5 computerized administrative datasets
    deterministic linkage (PHNs)
  • ACCS Emergency Encounters
  • CIHI Hospital Abstracts
  • Blue Cross Insurance Medication Use
  • Physician Claims File Doctor visits
  • Alberta Health Registration
  • Residence (community dwelling)
  • Demographics

25
Methods (cont.)
  • Retrospective Cohort Study
  • All Albertans aged 66 and older
  • Community dwelling
  • Not in a seniors home or continuing care centre
  • 98/99 Fiscal year

26
Methods (cont.)
  • Dependent Variable
  • injurious fall requiring presentation to the
    Emergency Department.
  • Independent variable
  • Individual medications (15 classes)
  • Purchase of medication with 60 days
  • Covariates
  • age, gender, SES, rural residence,
    co-morbidities.
  • Analysis
  • Logistic regression
  • Bivariate
  • Mulitvariable models

27
Methods (cont.)
  • Co-morbid Conditions - 17
  • Eye disorders, Incontinence, Nutritional
    deficiency, Parkinsons, Osteoarthritis,
    Dementia, Depression, Neuroses, Osteoporosis,
    Cerebrovascular disease, Hypertension,
    Cardiovascular disease, Diabetes, Cancer,
    Gait/balance disorders, Seizures, Injury trauma

28
Results
  • 9,124 falls suffered by 8,530 individuals
  • 32.3 falls/1000 population
  • 35 were hospitalized
  • 37 were coded as unspecified falls at home
  • 31 were coded as falls on the same level
  • 56 were fractures
  • 12 were hip fractures
  • 7 of fallers died within a year of the fall

29
Results
Seasonal Variation
30
Results

31
Results

32
Results
  • Medications
  • Narcotic pain killers and anti-convulsants
  • Large effects
  • Five other med classes related to injury
  • Other Significant Results
  • Co-morbidity
  • Dementia OR 1.93(1.73,2.16)
  • Seizures OR 1.88(1.49,2.36)
  • Previous injury trauma OR 1.73(1.66,1.82)
  • Cerebrovascular Disease OR 1.48(1.34,1.63)
  • Treaty Status OR 2.00(1.64,2.43)
  • Age OR 1.01(1.00,1.02)
  • Gender OR 1.56(1.48,1.63)

33
Discussion
  • Falls have serious health consequences for
    seniors
  • Large number of fractures
  • Double the death rate in the subsequent year
  • No significant seasonal trend
  • Treaty status Aboriginals at high risk.
  • Those taking narcotic pain killers and
    anti-convulsants at higher risk of falls
  • Those diagnosed with dementia, seizures, stroke,
    history of injury at risk

34
Discussion
  • Limitations
  • Health behaviour may be related to medication use
  • Eg anti-coagulants
  • Other care settings not examined
  • Doctors offices, chiropractors, etc.
  • Alcohol and non-prescriptions drugs not measured
  • Only billings measured, not compliance
  • Only injuries that occurred in Alberta
  • No snowbirds

35
Discussion
  • Strengths
  • Uniform health system
  • All variables measured in the same way for
    fallers and non-fallers
  • Population based
  • Few exclusions
  • Both ED data and hospitalizations

36
Conclusion
  • Narcotic pain killers related to fall injury
  • Indicator of severity of disease or independent
    risk factor
  • Same issue with anti-convulsants
  • Nevertheless, medication use related to injury
  • More research needed with Aboriginal population
  • First study to identify this issue
  • Further work with possible drug interactions

37
Road Distance to Regional Hospital
  • 0 15 kms. Reference
  • 16 50 kms. OR1.02(0.96,1.08)
  • 51 100 kms. OR1.19(1.13,1.27)
  • 101 200 kms. OR1.30(1.21,1.40)
  • 201 300 kms. OR1.10(0.97,1.24)
  • 301 400 kms. OR0.77(90.42,1.42)
  • gt400 kms. OR9.51(4.57,19.79)

38
Further Research
  • Large seniors health utilization study
  • Medication use and
  • MVCs
  • Burns
  • Poisoning
  • Intentional injury?
  • Overdoses
  • Medication Misuse
  • Suicide/Self-inflicted injury

39
  • Regional Mortality
  • Regional Prescription Use

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