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Journal Article

Citation

Katsiferis A, Mortensen LH, Khurana MP, Mishra S, Jensen MK, Bhatt S. Age Ageing 2023; 52(8).

Copyright

(Copyright © 2023, Oxford University Press)

DOI

10.1093/ageing/afad159

PMID

37651750

PMCID

PMC10471203

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To develop a prognostic model of 1-year mortality for individuals aged 65+ presenting at the emergency department (ED) with a fall based on health care spending patterns to guide clinical decision-making.

DESIGN: Population-based cohort study (nā€‰=ā€‰35,997) included with a fall in 2013 and followed 1 year.

METHODS: Health care spending indicators (dynamical indicators of resilience, DIORs) 2 years before admission were evaluated as potential predictors, along with age, sex and other clinical and sociodemographic covariates. Multivariable logistic regression models were developed and internally validated (10-fold cross-validation). Performance was assessed via discrimination (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve, AUC), Brier scores, calibration and decision curve analysis.

RESULTS: The AUC of age and sex for mortality was 72.5% [95% confidence interval 71.8 to 73.2]. The best model included age, sex, number of medications and health care spending DIORs. It exhibited high discrimination (AUC: 81.1 [80.5 to 81.6]), good calibration and potential clinical benefit for various threshold probabilities. Overall, health care spending patterns improved predictive accuracy the most while also exhibiting superior performance and clinical benefit.

CONCLUSIONS: Patterns of health care spending have the potential to significantly improve assessments on who is at high risk of dying following admission to the ED with a fall. The proposed methodology can assist in predicting the prognosis of fallers, emphasising the added predictive value of longitudinal health-related information next to clinical and sociodemographic predictors.


Language: en

Keywords

prognosis; older adults; mortality; falls; older people

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