Author: Ng CACM1,2, Fairhall N3, Wallbank G3, Tiedemann A3, Michaleff ZA3,4, Sherrington C3
Affiliation:
1Medical School, University of Western Australia, Crawley, Western Australia, Australia.
2The University of Sydney School of Public Health, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
3Institute for Musculoskeletal Health, The University of Sydney School of Public Health, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
4Institute for Evidence-Based Healthcare, Bond University Faculty of Health Sciences and Medicine, Gold Coast, Queensland, Australia.
Conference/Journal: BMJ Open Sport Exerc Med.
Date published: 2019 Dec 16
Other:
Volume ID: 5 , Issue ID: 1 , Pages: e000663 , Special Notes: doi: 10.1136/bmjsem-2019-000663. eCollection 2019. , Word Count: 250
Introduction: There is strong evidence that exercise prevents falls in community-dwelling older people. This review summarises trial and participant characteristics, intervention contents and study quality of 108 randomised trials evaluating exercise interventions for falls prevention in community-dwelling older adults.
Methods: MEDLINE, EMBASE, CENTRAL and three other databases sourced randomised controlled trials of exercise as a single intervention to prevent falls in community-dwelling adults aged 60+ years to May 2018.
Results: 108 trials with 146 intervention arms and 23 407 participants were included. Trials were undertaken in 25 countries, 90% of trials had predominantly female participants and 56% had elevated falls risk as an inclusion criterion. In 72% of trial interventions attendance rates exceeded 50% and/or 75% of participants attended 50% or more sessions. Characteristics of the trials within the three types of intervention programme that reduced falls were: (1) balance and functional training interventions lasting on average 25 weeks (IQR 16-52), 39% group based, 63% individually tailored; (2) Tai Chi interventions lasting on average 20 weeks (IQR 15-43), 71% group based, 7% tailored; (3) programmes with multiple types of exercise lasting on average 26 weeks (IQR 12-52), 54% group based, 75% tailored. Only 35% of trials had low risk of bias for allocation concealment, and 53% for attrition bias.
Conclusions: The characteristics of effective exercise interventions can guide clinicians and programme providers in developing optimal interventions based on current best evidence. Future trials should minimise likely sources of bias and comply with reporting guidelines.
© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.
KEYWORDS: evidence-based; exercise; fall; review; senior
PMID: 31908838 PMCID: PMC6936986 DOI: 10.1136/bmjsem-2019-000663