Geriatric Nursing
Volume 26, Issue 2 , Pages 106-110, March 2005

Falls associated with dementia: How can you tell?

  • Deanna Gray Miceli, DNSc, APRN, FAANP

      Affiliations

    • DEANNA GRAY MICELI, DNSc, APRN, FAANP, is a board certified Gerontological Nurse Practitioner with expertise in falls. She is a post-doctoral scholar (2002-2004) of the John A. Hartford Foundation Building Academic Geriatric Nursing Capacity Program at the University of Pennsylvania-School of Nursing, adjunct assistant professor, University of Pennsylvania and nurse practitioner/falls consultant, the New Jersey Department of Health and Human Services, Trenton, New Jersey.

Abstract 

In any practice setting, professional nurses must be skilled to assess and manage medical problems rapidly. Post-fall assessment among those with dementia is a daunting task. Emergent medical problems after a fall are difficult to detect among those with dementia, because impaired communication portrays a false reality that the older adult is uninjured. Furthermore, early detection of potential post-fall injuries may not occur within a health care system that relies on verbal communication and eyewitness accounts as the main source of fall occurrence information. Professional nurses must turn to other means of fall detection. One such strategy relies on observable changes in function and behavior, such as a recent decline in mobility, change in gait, level of consciousness, neurological function or vital signs. Those most susceptible exhibit prior observable signs of visual-spatial impairment such as impaired clock drawing, gait apraxia, and inability to negotiate their environment without falling.

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PII: S0197-4572(05)00032-7

doi:10.1016/j.gerinurse.2005.01.014

Geriatric Nursing
Volume 26, Issue 2 , Pages 106-110, March 2005