@article {Haagsmai67, author = {Juanita A Haagsma and Branko F Olij and Marek Majdan and Ed F van Beeck and Theo Vos and Chris D Castle and Zachary V Dingels and Jack T Fox and Erin B Hamilton and Zichen Liu and Nicholas L S Roberts and Dillon O Sylte and Olatunde Aremu and Till Winfried B{\"a}rnighausen and Antonio M Borz{\`\i} and Andrew M Briggs and Juan J Carrero and Cyrus Cooper and Ziad El-Khatib and Christian Lycke Ellingsen and Seyed-Mohammad Fereshtehnejad and Irina Filip and Florian Fischer and Josep Maria Haro and Jost B Jonas and Aliasghar A Kiadaliri and Ai Koyanagi and Raimundas Lunevicius and Tuomo J Meretoja and Shafiu Mohammed and Ashish Pathak and Amir Radfar and Salman Rawaf and David Laith Rawaf and Lidia Sanchez Riera and Ivy Shiue and Tommi Juhani Vasankari and Spencer L James and Suzanne Polinder}, title = {Falls in older aged adults in 22 European countries: incidence, mortality and burden of disease from 1990 to 2017}, volume = {26}, number = {Suppl 2}, pages = {i67--i74}, year = {2020}, doi = {10.1136/injuryprev-2019-043347}, publisher = {BMJ Publishing Group Ltd}, abstract = {Introduction Falls in older aged adults are an important public health problem. Insight into differences in fall-related injury rates between countries can serve as important input for identifying and evaluating prevention strategies. The objectives of this study were to compare Global Burden of Disease (GBD) 2017 estimates on incidence, mortality and disability-adjusted life years (DALYs) due to fall-related injury in older adults across 22 countries in the Western European region and to examine changes over a 28-year period.Methods We performed a secondary database descriptive study using the GBD 2017 results on age-standardised fall-related injury in older adults aged 70 years and older in 22 countries from 1990 to 2017.Results In 2017, in the Western European region, 13 840 per 100 000 (uncertainty interval (UI) 11 837{\textendash}16 113) older adults sought medical treatment for fall-related injury, ranging from 7594 per 100 000 (UI 6326{\textendash}9032) in Greece to 19 796 per 100 000 (UI 15 536{\textendash}24 233) in Norway. Since 1990, fall-related injury DALY rates showed little change for the whole region, but patterns varied widely between countries. Some countries (eg, Belgium and Netherlands) have lost their favourable positions due to an increasing fall-related injury burden of disease since 1990.Conclusions From 1990 to 2017, there was considerable variation in fall-related injury incidence, mortality, DALY rates and its composites in the 22 countries in the Western European region. It may be useful to assess which fall prevention measures have been taken in countries that showed continuous low or decreasing incidence, death and DALY rates despite ageing of the population.}, issn = {1353-8047}, URL = {https://injuryprevention.bmj.com/content/26/Suppl_2/i67}, eprint = {https://injuryprevention.bmj.com/content/26/Suppl_2/i67.full.pdf}, journal = {Injury Prevention} }