10779/rcsi.10798823.v1 Mary E. Walsh Mary E. Walsh Jan Sorensen Jan Sorensen Rose Galvin Rose Galvin David Williams David Williams Joseph A. Harbison Joseph A. Harbison Sean Murphy Sean Murphy Ronan Collins Ronan Collins Dominick McCabe Dominick McCabe Morgan Crowe Morgan Crowe Frances Horgan Frances Horgan First Year Post-Stroke Healthcare Costs And Fall-Status Among Those Discharged To The Community Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland 2019 Stroke Accidental falls Economic Rehabilitation Physiotherapy 2019-11-22 17:24:39 Journal contribution https://repository.rcsi.com/articles/journal_contribution/First_Year_Post-Stroke_Healthcare_Costs_And_Fall-Status_Among_Those_Discharged_To_The_Community/10798823 <p><strong>Introduction:</strong> Falls are common post-stroke events but their relationship with healthcare costs is unclear. The aim of this study was to examine the relationship between healthcare costs in the first year after stroke and falls among survivors discharged to the community.</p> <p><strong>Patients and Methods:</strong> Survivors of acute stroke with planned home-discharges from five large hospitals in Ireland were recruited. Falls and healthcare utilisation data were recorded using inpatient records, monthly calendars and post-discharge interviews. Cost of stroke was estimated for each participant from hospital admission for one year. The association of fall-status with overall cost was tested with multivariable linear regression analysis adjusting for pre-stroke function, stroke severity, age and living situation.</p> <p><strong>Results:</strong>109 stroke survivors with complete follow-up data (mean age=68.5 years (SD=13.5 years)) were included. 53 participants (49%) fell following stroke, of whom 28 (26%) had recurrent falls. Estimated mean total healthcare cost was €20,244 (SD=€23,456). The experience of one fall and recurrent falls was independently associated with higher costs of care (p=0.02 and p</p> <p><strong>Discussion: </strong>The observed relationship between falls and cost is likely to be underestimated as aids and adaptions, productivity losses, and nursing home care were not included.</p> <p><strong>Conclusion:</strong> This study points at differences across fall-status in several healthcare costs categories, namely the index admission, secondary/ tertiary care (including inpatient re-admissions) and allied health care. Future research could compare the cost-effectiveness of inpatient versus community-based fall-prevention after stroke. Further studies are also required to inform post-stroke bone-health management and fracture-risk reduction.</p>