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Can falls risk prediction tools correctly identify fall-prone elderly rehabilitation inpatients? A systematic review and meta-analysis. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study reviews falls prediction tools for elderly patients in rehabilitation hospitals, highlighting the potential for severe consequences like disability or death from falls.
  • It identifies three tools (STRATIFY, PJC-FRAT, DOWNTON) with varying sensitivity and specificity in predicting falls, noting that the STRATIFY tool was the most commonly evaluated.
  • Despite some tools showing promise, none achieved an ideal balance between sensitivity and specificity, thus questioning their effectiveness compared to clinical judgment.

Article Abstract

Background: Falls of elderly people may cause permanent disability or death. Particularly susceptible are elderly patients in rehabilitation hospitals. We systematically reviewed the literature to identify falls prediction tools available for assessing elderly inpatients in rehabilitation hospitals.

Methods And Findings: We searched six electronic databases using comprehensive search strategies developed for each database. Estimates of sensitivity and specificity were plotted in ROC space graphs and pooled across studies. Our search identified three studies which assessed the prediction properties of falls prediction tools in a total of 754 elderly inpatients in rehabilitation hospitals. Only the STRATIFY tool was assessed in all three studies; the other identified tools (PJC-FRAT and DOWNTON) were assessed by a single study. For a STRATIFY cut-score of two, pooled sensitivity was 73% (95%CI 63 to 81%) and pooled specificity was 42% (95%CI 34 to 51%). An indirect comparison of the tools across studies indicated that the DOWNTON tool has the highest sensitivity (92%), while the PJC-FRAT offers the best balance between sensitivity and specificity (73% and 75%, respectively). All studies presented major methodological limitations.

Conclusions: We did not identify any tool which had an optimal balance between sensitivity and specificity, or which were clearly better than a simple clinical judgment of risk of falling. The limited number of identified studies with major methodological limitations impairs sound conclusions on the usefulness of falls risk prediction tools in geriatric rehabilitation hospitals.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3398864PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0041061PLOS

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