LifeCare® and Yale University To Offer Fall Prevention Services for Older Adults
Managed health care organizations,
employers, professional geriatric care managers and
older adults to benefit from wide range of educational
tools and resources
SHELTON, CT, January 9, 2008
LifeCare®,
Inc., provider of comprehensive specialty care services
and a longtime leader in the work/life
industry, is now offering a comprehensive set of
fall
prevention services to employers, managed health
care organizations and professional geriatric care managers
nationwide, thanks to a partnership with Yale University
and its Connecticut Center for Fall Prevention (CCFP)
programthe first partnership of its kind for the
University and the CCFP.
Under terms of the partnership, LifeCare
is making available fall prevention resources developed
by Yale and Dr. Mary Tinetti, director of the Yale
Program on Aging. These resources include a proprietary
fall prevention kit, educational articles, guides, tip
sheets and more. In addition, Yale and LifeCare are
developing a fall prevention curriculum that will be
delivered to LifeCare's staff as well as members of
its national network of professional geriatric care
managers.
Dr. Mary Tinetti and her team at Yale
University are internationally recognized as experts
on the subject of fall prevention. LifeCare's fall prevention
services address a range of risk factors for falling
and include medication management, behavioral instructions
and exercise programs aimed at reducing risk factors.
“Most of the nation's employers, workers
and professional care managers have never before had
access to specialized fall
and injury prevention materials of this caliber
and scope,” said LifeCare's medical director, Dr. Barney
Spivack. “And with the nation's population and workforce
aging so rapidly, resources like these are becoming
more and more critical.”
Peter G. Burki, LifeCare's CEO, added,
“We're absolutely delighted to be partnering with Dr.
Tinetti and her team at Yale, one of the country's most
prestigious centers for medical research, education
and advanced health care. And we're pleased to be leading
the way in raising awareness of fall
prevention among employers, managed health care
organizations and working caregivers.”
“In spite of compelling data that many
falls are preventable, lack of attention to fall prevention
is due in part to the focus on treatment of individual
diseases,” said Dr. Tinetti. “Older adults require management
of multiple simultaneous conditions in a manner that
protects their ability to function safely. The widespread
incorporation of fall risk evaluation and management
into practice requires the adoption of new practices
by all providers, and this effort by LifeCare is an
important step in that direction.”
Dr. Tinetti's team was the first to
find that it is possible to identify older persons at
risk for falling and injury; that falls and injuries
are associated with a range of more serious consequences;
and that risk-reduction strategies are clinically effective
and cost-effective. She has been the director of the
Claude D. Pepper Older Americans Independence Center
at Yale since 1992. Her program, the Connecticut Center
for Fall Prevention, was supported by The Patrick &
Catherine Weldon Donaghue Medical Research Foundation.
Thirty-five to 40 percent of people
over the age of 65 fall at least once a year, says Dr.
Spivack. The resulting costs and the impact on quality
of life can be catastrophic. In 2000, direct medical
costs totaled $19.5 billion dollars for fall injuries.
By 2020, the cost of fall injuries is expected to reach
$43.8 billion dollars, according to published reports.
But older adults aren't the only people
at risk, Dr.
Spivack points out. Roughly 60 percent of Americans
caring for older loved ones also work full-time jobs.
Attending to a loved one who has fallen often requires
an intensive level of care, forcing these caregivers
to miss work, become less productive or quit their jobs
altogether. LifeCare's new resources are designed specifically
to help older adults and their caregivers avoid these
problems by significantly reducing an older adult's
risk of falling, thanks to Dr. Tinetti's techniques,
which have been proven to reduce falls. In a randomized,
controlled clinical trial, the rate of falling was reduced
by 30 percent among older adults. Further, the costs
of delivering these interventions were more than offset
by the decreased use of health services in the year
following intervention.
LifeCare's Fall
Prevention Kit, for example, contains several informational
guidesLiving a Healthy
Fall-Free Life; Home
Safety for Fall Prevention; and Basic
Exercises and Good
Posture for Better Balance; among othersand
a variety of helpful products such as a nightlight,
fluorescent strips, checklists, tip sheets, and more.
Notes to Editors
Peter G. Burki and Dr. Barney Spivack
are available for interview.
About the
Yale
School of Medicine
Founded in 1810, the Yale School of Medicine is a world-renowned
center for biomedical research, education and advanced
health care. The School of Medicine consistently ranks
among the handful of leading recipients of research
funding from the National Institutes of Health and other
organizations supporting the biomedical sciences. The
school's unique curriculum, known as the Yale system
of medical education, promotes teaching in small seminar,
conference and tutorial settings, and requires student
self-evaluation, independent thinking and investigation.
Since 1839, Yale has required that each student complete
a thesis based on original research prior to graduation.
Graduates of the school have gone on to significant
leadership positions in virtually every medical field,
as well as many non-medical areas.
About LifeCare®,
Inc.
LifeCare's cost-saving benefits help clients reduce
their most pervasive absenteeism and productivity drains
including elder care, caregiving support, aging-oriented
health and wellness issues, and more. With the rapid
aging of the American workforce, a growing number of
employers are turning to LifeCare to help them address
the evolving needs of their organizations. LifeCare
helps to ensure that their employees make informed,
healthy lifestyle choices; protect their physical and
cognitive health; maintain independence for as long
as possible; and receive the legal and financial assessments
they need to secure their futures. Founded in 1984,
LifeCare now serves 1,500 client companies with 4.5
million individuals within corporations, health plans,
government agencies and unions. For more information,
visit www.lifecare.com.
Media contact: Michael Civiello
LifeCare, Inc.
pr1@lifecare.com
203-291-4170 |
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