Abstract. Objective: To determine the effect of a practice guideline for the ED management of falls in community-dwelling elders on selected health outcomes. Methods: The experimental design was a prepost-intervention comparison with one-year pre-and post-intervention phases. The guideline was presented to emergency physicians and nurses during a two-week interval between these two periods. The intervention also included health information provided to the subjects and a one-time educational intervention directed at primary care providers. The number of falls in the year following the ED visit was determined by telephone interview. The number of hospitalizations for falls was determined from the HMO database of all health care encounters. Results: 1,899 patients were eligible for the study; 1,140 pre-intervention and 759 post-intervention patients. Of these, 1,504 (79%) were interviewed by telephone 12 to 15 months after their initial ED visits. Eighteen percent of the pre-intervention and 21% of the post-intervention subjects reported at least one fall in the 12 months following their ED visits (p = 0.162). The rate of falls per 100 patient years was 36.2 in both groups. Three percent of both groups were hospitalized at least once for a fall in the year following their ED visits. One percent in each group were hospitalized for a hip fracture. Conclusions: The attempted implementation of a practice guideline for the ED management of falls in community-dwelling elders did not result in a reduction in total falls, or in hospitalizations for falls, injuries, or fractures. Key words: practice guidelines; accidental falls-prevention and control; aged; emergency medicine; geriatric assessment; outcomes. ACADEMIC EMERGENCY MEDICINE 1999; 6:1224-1231 F ALLS are a substantial problem in individuals Ն65 years of age 1-5 and directly or indirectly cause 12% of all deaths in the elder population. 3,6 Recent surveys have demonstrated inadequacies in training, research, and continuing education in geriatric emergency medicine. 7,8 In an attempt to improve emergency physicians' (EPs') understanding of the special problems of elders, we developed a practice guideline for the ED evaluation and treatment of falls in older persons. We directed this intervention towards ambulatory, community-dwelling elders in whom a fall might be a sentinel event heralding a functional decline, in the hope that selected interventions might prevent future falls or other events that would lead to the need for medical interventions. The guideline has previously been described in detail.
9The effect of the guideline on the process of ED care is described in a companion article in this issue of Academic Emergency Medicine in which we demonstrated that a one-time educational intervention directed at EPs and nurses coupled with a practice guideline reminder sheet attached to patients' ED charts had a minimal effect on the process of care in the ED as measured by physician and nurse documentation.10 However, we postulated that there might be changes in th...