TY - UNPB
T1 - The association between delirium and falls in older adults in the community: a systematic review
AU - Eost-Telling, Charlotte
AU - McNally, Lucy
AU - Yang, Yang
AU - Shi, Chunhu
AU - Norman, Gill
AU - Ahmed, Saima
AU - Poku, Brenda
AU - Money, Annemarie
AU - Hawley-Hague, Helen
AU - Todd, Chris
AU - Shenkin, Susan D.
AU - Vardy, Emma R.L.C.
PY - 2024/3/13
Y1 - 2024/3/13
N2 - ObjectiveSystematically review and critically appraise evidence for the association between delirium and falls in community-dwelling adults aged 60 years and above
MethodsWe searched EMBASE, MEDLINE, PsycINFO, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, CINAHL and Evidence-Based Medicine Reviews (EBMR) databases in April 2023. Standard methods were used to screen, extract data, assess risk of bias (using Newcastle Ottawa scale), provide a narrative synthesis and where appropriate conduct meta-analysis.
ResultsWe included eight studies, with at least 3505 unique participants. Five found limited evidence for an association between delirium and subsequent falls: one adjusted study showed an increase in falls (RR 6.66;95% CI 2.16-20.53) but the evidence was low certainty. Four non-adjusted studies found no clear effect. Three studies (one with two subgroups treated separately) found some evidence for an association between falls and subsequent delirium: meta-analysis of three adjusted studies showed an increase in delirium (pooled OR 2.01; 95%CI 1.52-2.66), one subgroup of non-adjusted data found no clear effect. Number of falls and fallers were reported in the studies. Four studies and one subgroup were at high risk of bias and one study had some concerns.
ConclusionsWe found limited evidence for the association between delirium and falls. More methodologically rigorous research is needed to understand the complex relationship, establish how and why this operates bi-directionally and identify potential modifying factors involved. We recommend the use of standardised assessment measures for delirium and falls. Clinicians should be aware of the potential relationship between these common presentations.
Key pointsO_LIThis is the first systematic review of the association between delirium and falls in the wider community population.
C_LIO_LIThere is relatively limited but consistent evidence on the direction of effect for both delirium preceding falls and falls preceding delirium.
C_LIO_LIMore high-quality longitudinal work is needed to explore the nature of this potentially complex and bidirectional relationship.
C_LIO_LIHistory of falls and delirium should be considered when assessing patients with incidence/suspected incidence of falls or delirium.
C_LI
AB - ObjectiveSystematically review and critically appraise evidence for the association between delirium and falls in community-dwelling adults aged 60 years and above
MethodsWe searched EMBASE, MEDLINE, PsycINFO, Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, CINAHL and Evidence-Based Medicine Reviews (EBMR) databases in April 2023. Standard methods were used to screen, extract data, assess risk of bias (using Newcastle Ottawa scale), provide a narrative synthesis and where appropriate conduct meta-analysis.
ResultsWe included eight studies, with at least 3505 unique participants. Five found limited evidence for an association between delirium and subsequent falls: one adjusted study showed an increase in falls (RR 6.66;95% CI 2.16-20.53) but the evidence was low certainty. Four non-adjusted studies found no clear effect. Three studies (one with two subgroups treated separately) found some evidence for an association between falls and subsequent delirium: meta-analysis of three adjusted studies showed an increase in delirium (pooled OR 2.01; 95%CI 1.52-2.66), one subgroup of non-adjusted data found no clear effect. Number of falls and fallers were reported in the studies. Four studies and one subgroup were at high risk of bias and one study had some concerns.
ConclusionsWe found limited evidence for the association between delirium and falls. More methodologically rigorous research is needed to understand the complex relationship, establish how and why this operates bi-directionally and identify potential modifying factors involved. We recommend the use of standardised assessment measures for delirium and falls. Clinicians should be aware of the potential relationship between these common presentations.
Key pointsO_LIThis is the first systematic review of the association between delirium and falls in the wider community population.
C_LIO_LIThere is relatively limited but consistent evidence on the direction of effect for both delirium preceding falls and falls preceding delirium.
C_LIO_LIMore high-quality longitudinal work is needed to explore the nature of this potentially complex and bidirectional relationship.
C_LIO_LIHistory of falls and delirium should be considered when assessing patients with incidence/suspected incidence of falls or delirium.
C_LI
KW - geriatric medicine
UR - https://doi.org/10.1101/2024.03.12.24303708
U2 - 10.1101/2024.03.12.24303708
DO - 10.1101/2024.03.12.24303708
M3 - Preprint
T3 - medRxiv
BT - The association between delirium and falls in older adults in the community: a systematic review
PB - Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory Press
ER -