Muscle strength, activity, housing and the risk of falls in elderly people

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Abstract

In a national survey in Britain, 983 elderly people randomly selected from eight areas were asked about falls they had had in the past. The independent association of social and physical variables with a history of one or more falls was analysed by multiple logistic regression. Those who had fallen one or more times had reduced grip strength and were less mobile than those who had not fallen. More of them used non-phenothiazine tranquillizers, lived alone, had recently lost weight or were physically disabled. Independent of these influences, a history of having fallen was strongly related to place of residence. Part of this relationship was explained by differences in housing, in particular the percentage of houses without indoor lavatories. © 1989 Oxford University Press.

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Wickham, C., Cooper, C., Margetts, B. M., & Barker, D. J. P. (1989). Muscle strength, activity, housing and the risk of falls in elderly people. Age and Ageing, 18(1), 47–51. https://doi.org/10.1093/ageing/18.1.47

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