Introduction
- Falls are the leading cause of fatal and non-fatal injuries in older adults aged 65 years and older.
- Every year, nearly 3 million fall-related injuries are treated in emergency departments across the U.S.
- Fear of falling, decreased physical activity, and limited community participation are common psychosocial implications associated with falls.
PICO Question
In community-dwelling adults aged 65 years or older is supervised group-based exercise compared to a non-exercise intervention effective in reducing number of falls and fear of falling?
Clinical Case
- Patient is a 71 year-old female living independently in the community with a history of falls.
- Chief complaint is feeling unsteady when walking and increased difficulty getting up from a chair.
- Previous medical history is consistent with hypertension, osteoporosis, and asthma.
- Goals are to improve her strength, balance, and confidence when walking outdoors.
- Patient reports having 3 falls in the past year.
- FES-I: 40/64
Search Strategy
- Databases searched: PubMed, CINAHL, PEDro
- Search Terms: “group exercise” OR “community group exercise” AND “physical therapy” OR “physiotherapy” AND “older adult” AND “falls prevention”
- Inclusion criteria: community-dwelling older adults ambulating independently, intervention consisted of a group-based activity designed/supervised by a health care provider, control group consisted of a non-exercise intervention, outcome measures included reports on number of falls and/or fear of falling, and articles were published between January 2011 through August, 2016.
- Exclusion criteria: disease specific populations (i.e. stroke, Parkinson’s disease, multiple sclerosis), older adults living in a long-term care facility or similar institution, intervention consisting of a group-based activity not designed or supervised by a health care provider, and lack of a non-exercise control group.
Flow Chart
- 469 articles identified (PubMed, CINAHL, PEDro, hand search)
- 186 duplicates eliminated
- 283 titles and abstracts screened
- 262 articles not relevant
- 21 full text evaluated
- 16 articles excluded
- 5 articles included
- 16 articles excluded
- 21 full text evaluated
- 262 articles not relevant
- 283 titles and abstracts screened
- 186 duplicates eliminated
Results
Clinical Bottom Line
There is inconsistent evidence that supports supervised group-based exercise is more effective compared to a non-exercise intervention in decreasing number of falls and fear of falling in community-dwelling older adults aged 65 years or older.
Limitations
- Group exercise intervention was not standardized across studies.
- Therapists delivering interventions varied across studies.
- Supplemental home exercise programs.
- Non-exercise comparisons varied across studies.
- Majority of outcome measures were based on self-report.
- Not all studies collected data at long-term follow-up.
Application
- Community-dwelling older adults can potentially benefit from physical therapist supervised group-based exercise as a falls prevention intervention.
- Supervised group-based exercise promotes increased physical activity in structured exercise sessions.
- Individuals with multiple comorbidities may also benefit from an individualized intervention delivered in groups with similarly matched impairments to promote a safe environment in the community that allows for both exercise and social interaction.
- Supervised group-based exercise can be a more cost effective falls prevention intervention compared to a traditional individual exercise intervention.
- It is theorized that group-based exercise can promote increased patient satisfaction and exercise adherence.
- The lack of adverse events reported in the evidence suggest that supervised group exercise can be a viable intervention for an individual with a history of falls and fear of falling.
Acknowledgements
Heidi Ojha, PT, DPT, OCS, FAAOMPT
References
For further questions please contact: patricia.garcia@temple.edu