A prospective study of the costs of falls in older adults living in the community

Abstract Objective:To establish the hospital cost and three‐month, post‐hospital community and personal costs associated with older adults discharged to the community after a fall. The timing, incidence and the determinants of these costs to the various sectors were also examined. Methods:Patients w...

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Main Authors: Sonja E. Hall, Delia V. Hendrie
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2003-06-01
Series:Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-842X.2003.tb00405.x
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spelling doaj-4ff2204bcb374d51b3c106065652d15c2020-11-25T00:25:58ZengWileyAustralian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health1326-02001753-64052003-06-0127334335110.1111/j.1467-842X.2003.tb00405.xA prospective study of the costs of falls in older adults living in the communitySonja E. Hall0Delia V. Hendrie1School of Population Health, University of Western AustraliaSchool of Population Health, University of Western AustraliaAbstract Objective:To establish the hospital cost and three‐month, post‐hospital community and personal costs associated with older adults discharged to the community after a fall. The timing, incidence and the determinants of these costs to the various sectors were also examined. Methods:Patients who attended the Emergency Department of a teaching hospital in Perth, Western Australia, were asked to complete a daily diary for three months of all community and informal care they received due to their fall and any associated expenses. Unit costs were collected from various sources and used to estimate the cost of community and informal care. Hospital inpatient costs were estimated using a patient‐based costing system. Results:Seventy‐nine patients participated with a total estimated falls‐related cost for the three‐month period of $316,155 to $333,648 (depending on assumptions used) and a mean cost per patient of between $4,291 and $4,642. The hospital cost accounted for 80%, community costs 16% and personal costs 4% of the total. Of community and personal costs, 60% was spent in the first month. Type of injury was the most significant determinant of hospital and community costs. Extrapolating these figures to the WA population provided an estimate of the total hospital and three‐month, post‐hospital cost of falls of $24.12 million per year, with $12.1 million funded by the Federal Government, $10.1 million by State/local government and $1.7 million in out‐of pocket expenses by patients. Conclusion:In the acute and immediate post‐discharge period, hospital costs accounted for most of the cost of care for older adults discharged to the community after a fall. Community and personal costs, however, were also incurred. The cost estimates provide useful information for planners of hospital and community care for older people who have sustained a fall.https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-842X.2003.tb00405.x
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sonja E. Hall
Delia V. Hendrie
spellingShingle Sonja E. Hall
Delia V. Hendrie
A prospective study of the costs of falls in older adults living in the community
Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health
author_facet Sonja E. Hall
Delia V. Hendrie
author_sort Sonja E. Hall
title A prospective study of the costs of falls in older adults living in the community
title_short A prospective study of the costs of falls in older adults living in the community
title_full A prospective study of the costs of falls in older adults living in the community
title_fullStr A prospective study of the costs of falls in older adults living in the community
title_full_unstemmed A prospective study of the costs of falls in older adults living in the community
title_sort prospective study of the costs of falls in older adults living in the community
publisher Wiley
series Australian and New Zealand Journal of Public Health
issn 1326-0200
1753-6405
publishDate 2003-06-01
description Abstract Objective:To establish the hospital cost and three‐month, post‐hospital community and personal costs associated with older adults discharged to the community after a fall. The timing, incidence and the determinants of these costs to the various sectors were also examined. Methods:Patients who attended the Emergency Department of a teaching hospital in Perth, Western Australia, were asked to complete a daily diary for three months of all community and informal care they received due to their fall and any associated expenses. Unit costs were collected from various sources and used to estimate the cost of community and informal care. Hospital inpatient costs were estimated using a patient‐based costing system. Results:Seventy‐nine patients participated with a total estimated falls‐related cost for the three‐month period of $316,155 to $333,648 (depending on assumptions used) and a mean cost per patient of between $4,291 and $4,642. The hospital cost accounted for 80%, community costs 16% and personal costs 4% of the total. Of community and personal costs, 60% was spent in the first month. Type of injury was the most significant determinant of hospital and community costs. Extrapolating these figures to the WA population provided an estimate of the total hospital and three‐month, post‐hospital cost of falls of $24.12 million per year, with $12.1 million funded by the Federal Government, $10.1 million by State/local government and $1.7 million in out‐of pocket expenses by patients. Conclusion:In the acute and immediate post‐discharge period, hospital costs accounted for most of the cost of care for older adults discharged to the community after a fall. Community and personal costs, however, were also incurred. The cost estimates provide useful information for planners of hospital and community care for older people who have sustained a fall.
url https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-842X.2003.tb00405.x
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