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Journal Article

Citation

Harvey LA, Mitchell R, Brodaty H, Draper B, Close JC. Australas. J. Ageing 2017; 36(2): 144-150.

Affiliation

Prince of Wales Clinical School, University of New South Wales Medicine, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2017, Australian Council on the Ageing, Publisher John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1111/ajag.12422

PMID

28635089

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To compare trends, causes, and outcomes of fall-related traumatic brain injury (TBI) between community-dwelling (CD) individuals and residential aged care facility (RACF) residents.

METHODS: Hospitalisation and RACF administrative data for 6635 individuals aged ≥65 years admitted to all NSW hospitals for fall-related TBI from 2008-2009 to 2012-2013 were linked.

RESULTS: Of the 6944 hospitalisations, 20.8% were for RACF residents. Age-standardised hospitalisation rates were almost fourfold higher for RACF residents than CD individuals (standardised rate ratio 3.7; 95% CI 3.4-4.1); but increased at a similar annual rate of 9.2% (95% CI 0.3-19.0) and 7.2% (95% CI 5.6-8.9), respectively. Compared to CD individuals: a higher proportion of falls in RACF residents were furniture-related (21.4% vs 9.9%); resulted in haemorrhage (82.5% vs 73.7%); and death (23.1% vs 14.9%). Overall, 7.7% of hospitalisations for CD individuals resulted in new permanent RACF placement.

CONCLUSION: Residential aged care facility residents have higher hospitalisation rates and poorer health outcomes than their CD counterparts.

© 2017 AJA Inc.


Language: en

Keywords

data linkage; falls; frail elderly; traumatic brain injury

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