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Journal Article

Citation

Menant JC, Schoene D, Lord SR. Ageing Res. Rev. 2014; 16: 83-104.

Affiliation

Falls and Balance Research Group, Neuroscience Research Australia, PO Box 1165, Randwick NSW 2031, Australia; School of Public Health and Community Medicine, University of New South Wales, UNSW Sydney 2052, Australia. Electronic address: s.lord@neura.edu.au.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.arr.2014.06.001

PMID

24915643

Abstract

Although simple assessments of gait speed have been shown to predict falls as well as hospitalisation, functional decline and mortality in older people, dual task gait speed paradigms have been increasingly evaluated with respect to fall prediction. Some studies have found that dual task walking paradigms can predict falls in older people. A systematic review and meta-analysis was conducted to determine whether dual task walking paradigms involving a secondary cognitive task have greater ability to predict falls than single walking tasks. The meta-analytic findings indicate single and dual task tests of gait speed are equivalent in the prediction of falls in older people and sub-group analyses revealed similar findings for studies that included only cognitively impaired participants, slow walkers or used secondary mental-tracking or verbal fluency tasks.


Language: en

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