A socio-spatial analysis of pedestrian falls in Aotearoa New Zealand

Type of content
Journal Article
Thesis discipline
Degree name
Publisher
Elsevier BV
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Language
en
Date
2020
Authors
Watkins A
Curl A
Mavoa S
Tomintz M
Todd V
Dicker B
Abstract

Falls are a leading cause of injury and accidental death, particularly amongst older people. Evidence of environmental risk factors for pedestrian falls among older adults could support age-friendly urban design and contribute to efforts to reduce the incidence of pedestrian falls and support outdoor mobility among older adults. Yet investigation of the environment in which pedestrian falls occur is often hampered by its reliance on participant recall and self-report information. We identified the point locations of falls occurring on the road or street among adults that were attended by an ambulance in New Zealand over a two-year period (2016–2018) and connected these to a range of social (e.g. deprivation) and environmental (e.g. slope, greenspace) risk factors. Three types of analysis were used: a descriptive analysis of fall rates, logistic regression assessing whether a patient was transported to hospital following a fall, and a negative binomial regression analysis of the pedestrian falls by small area. We found a number of differences in the built environment surrounding fall locations between age groups. Compared with younger age groups, older adults showed high fall rates closer to home, and higher fall rates in areas with many types of destinations nearby. Additionally, our results showed a higher rate of pedestrian falls in more deprived areas. People who live in more deprived areas also fell over more frequently, but the pattern is stronger based on deprivation at the fall location, rather than home location. Residents of more deprived areas were less likely to be transported to hospital following a fall. Thus, our findings have equity implications for both environments and patient experience. These patterns could not have been identified without the novel use of spatially specific fall data.

Description
Citation
Watkins A, Curl A, Mavoa S, Tomintz M, Todd V, Dicker B (2020). A socio-spatial analysis of pedestrian falls in Aotearoa New Zealand. Social Science & Medicine. 113212-113212.
Keywords
older adults, outdoor falls, pedestrian falls, geospatial analysis, environmental characteristics
Ngā upoko tukutuku/Māori subject headings
ANZSRC fields of research
Fields of Research::42 - Health sciences::4203 - Health services and systems::420301 - Aged health care
Fields of Research::33 - Built environment and design::3304 - Urban and regional planning::330413 - Urban planning and health
Rights
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