News

Cochrane on Preventing Falls: Exercise Is Best Intervention


 

FROM THE COCHRANE COLLABORATION

However, providing walking aids such as canes, or communication enhancers such as hearing aids and personal alarm systems, did not decrease falls.

Similarly, changes in footwear were effective in some cases but not in others. The use of balance-enhancing insoles cut the rate of falls but not the risk of falls, and was beneficial primarily to patients who had disabling foot pain. The use of an antislip device on outdoor shoes decreased falls only in adverse weather conditions.

The evidence for or against patient education was inconclusive because of insufficient data at this time.

"As the majority of trials specifically excluded older people who were cognitively impaired, the results of this review may not be applicable to this important group of people at risk [for falling]," Dr. Gillespie and associates said.

Similarly, their review excluded trials involving patients with Parkinson’s disease and recovering stroke patients, "as we felt the results of interventions for those neurological conditions were not necessarily applicable to older people as a whole," they added.

No financial conflicts of interest were reported.

Pages

Recommended Reading

Coffee Consumption Linked to Lower Dementia Risk in Elderly
MDedge Family Medicine
Environment Modifies ApoE e4-Related Risk of Alzheimer's Disease
MDedge Family Medicine
Enzalutamide Prolongs Prostate Cancer Survival After Chemotherapy Fails
MDedge Family Medicine
Drinking Patterns Linked to Cognitive Impairment in Older Adults
MDedge Family Medicine
Alzheimer's Drug Misses Primary End Points in Trials
MDedge Family Medicine
Drug Dosage, Gender Affect Impulsivity Prognosis in Parkinson's
MDedge Family Medicine
Changing How We Prescribe Antipsychotics for Dementia
MDedge Family Medicine
Low-Fat Diet a Dud for Women's Heart Disease
MDedge Family Medicine
Troubleshooting metal-on-metal hip replacements
MDedge Family Medicine
Managing chronic pain in older adults: 6 steps to overcoming medication barriers
MDedge Family Medicine