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RESEARCH AND PRACTICE |
Pekka Kannus, Seppo Niemi, and Mika Palvanen are with the Accident & Trauma Research Center, President Urho Kaleva Kekkonen Institute for Health Promotion Research, Tampere, Finland. Pekka Kannus is also with the Department of Surgery, Tampere University Medical School and University Hospital, Tampere, Finland. Jari Parkkari is with Tampere Research Center of Sports Medicine, President Urho Kaleva Kekkonen Institute for Health Promotion Research.
Correspondence: Requests for reprints should be sent to Pekka Kannus, MD, PhD, UKK Institute, PO Box 30, FIN-33501 Tampere, Finland (e-mail: pekka.kannus{at}uta.fi).
| ABSTRACT |
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Falls and fall-induced injuries in older people are a major public health problem in modern societies with aging populations. Injury is the fifth leading cause of death in older adults, and most of these fatal injuries are related to falls.
We have assessed the nationwide trends in fall-induced deaths of older people in Finland for more than 3 decades (19712002), and the results showed that the number of fall-induced deaths among elderly Finns is clearly increasing, especially among men.
| INTRODUCTION |
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| METHODS |
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The Finnish Official Cause-of-Death Statistics are, in practice, 100% complete because each death, its official certificate (issued by the physician who certified the death), and the corresponding person information in our computerized population register are cross-checked. The accuracy of the data is, in turn, maximized by triple-checking each code of the death certificate.4,6 In injury-based deaths, the accuracy of the Finnish death certificates and their cause-of-death codes is verified further by autopsies performed in 94% to 97% of these deaths.4,6
The mortality data were drawn from the entire population of adults aged 50 years or older in Finland, which was 1 154 968 in 1971 and 1 826 356 in 2002. Thus, the absolute numbers and incidences of deaths were not sample-based estimates but true descriptions of the whole population. To calculate the age-adjusted incidences, the age adjustment was done by means of direct standardization using the mean population of persons aged 50 years or older between 1971 and 2002 as the standard population or reference point. In this way, the population and its death rates became comparable across the study years and allowed annual assessment of the average individual risk for fall-induced death. The age-specific incidence rates were calculated in the age groups of 50 to 59, 60 to 69, 70 to 79, and 80 years or older.
| RESULTS |
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| DISCUSSION |
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Our data corroborate previous observations on the development of various fall-related injuries in elderly people1,2,4,8 but cannot specify the exact reasons for the increase in the age-adjusted incidence of fall-induced deaths in men. An increase in the average risk of falling may partly explain the phenomenon, or elderly men now may have more serious consequences of falling than did their predecessors.2,4 In other words, on average, elderly men who fall now may be less healthy and functionally less capable than their age-matched counterparts in the past so that not even improved trauma care has been able to stop this regrettable increase in fall-induced deaths.
In conclusion, the number of fall-induced deaths among elderly Finns shows a clear increase. In men, the increase has occurred at a rate that cannot be explained merely by demographic changes. Therefore, detailed epidemiological studies, in addition to investigations of possible behavioral, environmental, and biological predisposing factors and dynamics, are needed to better understand this phenomenon. In addition, in both women and men, multifield, broad-scale fall-prevention interventions should be urgently implemented to control the problem.
| Acknowledgments |
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Human Participant Protection
No protocol approval was needed for this study.
| Footnotes |
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Contributors
All authors were involved in the study design, data acquisition and analysis, and writing of the brief.
Accepted for publication June 24, 2004.
| References |
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2. Kannus P, Niemi S, Palvanen M, Parkkari J. Continuously increasing number and incidence of fall-induced, fracture-associated, spinal cord injuries in elderly persons. Arch Intern Med. 2000;160:21452149.
3. Tinetti ME. Preventing falls in elderly persons. N Engl J Med. 2003;348:4249.
4. Kannus P, Parkkari J, Koskinen S, et al. Fall-induced injuries and deaths among older adults. JAMA. 1999;281:18951899.
5. Rivara FP, Grossman DC, Cummings P. Injury prevention. N Engl J Med. 1997;337:543547.
6. Official Statistics of Finland. Official Cause-of-Death Statistics 2002. Helsinki: Statistics Finland; 2003.
7. Official Statistics of Finland. Population Projections 20012030. Helsinki: Statistics Finland; 2001.
8. Shinoda-Tagawa T, Clark DE. Trends in hospitalization after injury: older women are displacing young men. Inj Prev. 2003;9:214219.
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