Falls and Fractures
See also Injury: Women’s Health Topics A-Z
Below are links to information related to falls and fractures. Click on the right menu or scroll down to view general information and programs, research, statistics and guidelines on this topic.
Research
2009
Unintentional
Fall Injuries Associated with Walkers and Canes in Older Adults
Treated in U.S. Emergency Departments (07/01/09)
(Journal of the American Geriatrics Society) From 2001 to 2006, an
average of 129 Americans ages 65 and older were treated in emergency
departments each day--a total of more than 47,000 each year--for injuries
from falls that involved walkers and canes, according to CDC. The study,
which examined six years of emergency department medical records, found
that, for older adults that had falls related to walkers- or canes,
most of the injuries involved walkers (87 percent). People were
seven times more likely to be injured in a fall with a walker as with
a cane. Older
women sustained more than three out of four walker-related injuries
(78 percent) and two out of three cane-related injuries (66 percent).
Women's Health A-Z Topics
- Aging
- Alcohol Use
- Arthritis
- Birth Defects and Disabilities
- Bleeding Disorders
- Bone Health
- Cancer
- Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (CFS)
- Community Health
- Deaths, Leading Causes
- Diabetes
- Disabilities
- Emergency Preparedness and Response
- Environmental Health
- Falls and Fractures
- Flu (Influenza)
- Foodborne Illness
- General Health
- Genomics
- Group B Strep
- Health Care
- Heart Disease and Stroke (Cardiovascular Disease)
- HIV/AIDS
- Immunizations and Vaccines
- Infectious Diseases
- Injury
- Malaria
- Mental Health
- Nutrition
- Occupational Health (Workplace Safety and Health)
- Oral Health
- Overweight and Obesity
- Parasites
- Physical Activity
- Pregnancy and Reproductive Health
- Sexually Transmitted Sexually Transmitted Infections (STIs and HIV/AIDS)
- Smoking and Tobacco
- Toxic Shock Syndrome
- Travelers' Health
- Vaccines
- Violence
- Workplace Safety and Health (Occupational Health)
This site contains documents in PDF format. You will need Adobe Acrobat Reader to access the file. If you do not have the Acrobat Reader, you may download a free copy from the Adobe Web site.
Page last modified: November 21, 2011
Page last reviewed: November 21, 2011