PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Predicting the future: Easy tool helps estimate fall risks

Researchers develop method to calculate the probability of a fall for older adults

Predicting the future: Easy tool helps estimate fall risks
2024-08-01
(Press-News.org)

Osaka, Japan — An aging society has posed a new global problem, the risk of falling. It is estimated that 1 in 3 adults over the age of 65 falls each year and the resulting injuries are becoming more prevalent.

To tackle this growing issue, Associate Professor Hiromitsu Toyoda and Specially Appointed Professor Tadashi Okano from Osaka Metropolitan University’s Graduate School of Medicine, together with Professor Chisato Hayashi from the University of Hyogo, have developed a formula and assessment tool for estimating fall risks that is simple for older adults to use. The tool was developed using data collected from older adults over a ten-year period from April 2010 to December 2019.

The research team reviewed a total of 7,726 physical tests and data from the Japanese government’s Kihon Checklist self-reporting questionnaire of 2,381 participants who participated in community-based exercise groups. The data was analyzed under a contractual agreement between Sumoto City in Hyogo Prefecture and the University of Hyogo.

A history of falls and the inability to stand on one leg were previously reported as the primary indicators for fall risks, but the recent analysis found that poor oral and cognitive function were also contributing factors. Additionally, short-term participation in the exercise program was found to be ineffective.

“We believe that this tool will provide valuable information to health care providers for screening older adults at risk for falls and assist them in prevention and follow-up care,” said Professor Toyoda. “We hope that municipalities will make extensive use of the system because preventing falls among older adults not only extends their life expectancy, but also helps control medical and long-term care costs.”

The results were published in Osteoporosis International.

###

About OMU 

Established in Osaka as one of the largest public universities in Japan, Osaka Metropolitan University is committed to shaping the future of society through “Convergence of Knowledge” and the promotion of world-class research. For more research news, visit https://www.omu.ac.jp/en/ and follow us on social media: X, Facebook, Instagram, LinkedIn.

END


[Attachments] See images for this press release:
Predicting the future: Easy tool helps estimate fall risks Predicting the future: Easy tool helps estimate fall risks 2

ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Eccentric-only resistance training can lower passive muscle stiffness

Eccentric-only resistance training can lower passive muscle stiffness
2024-08-01
Resistance, or weight training, is widely recommended in sports and rehabilitation as an effective exercise to increase muscular strength and size. This form of exercise involves applying resistance to muscle contraction to build strength. However, some practitioners believe resistance training can increase passive muscle stiffness over time. Passive muscle stiffness is a key indicator of how muscles behave mechanically when they are stretched without active contraction. Specifically, it refers to the amount of force required to change the muscle length by a given amount during passive stretching. Studies ...

Enhancing automatic image cropping models with advanced adversarial techniques

Enhancing automatic image cropping models with advanced adversarial techniques
2024-08-01
Image cropping is an essential task in many contexts, right from social media and e-commerce to advanced computer vision applications. Cropping helps maintain image quality by avoiding unnecessary resizing, which can degrade the image and consume computational resources. It is also useful when an image needs to conform to a predetermined aspect ratio, such as in thumbnails. Over the past decade, engineers around the world have developed various machine learning (ML) models to automatically crop images. These models aim to crop an input image in a way that preserves its most relevant parts. However, ...

$2.4 million grant helping MCG scientists better understand what happens to our skeleton as we age

$2.4 million grant helping MCG scientists better understand what happens to our skeleton as we age
2024-08-01
AUGUSTA, Ga. (Aug. 1, 2024) – Figuring out how the tissues in our bones, adrenal glands, muscle and fat “talk” to each other could help scientists better understand what happens to our skeletons with age, when our bones tend to lose mass and become weaker, leaving us at risk for falls and fractures. “Tissues don’t function in isolation – everything in the body “talks” to everything else to keep people healthy across the lifespan,” explains Meghan McGee-Lawrence, PhD, bone biologist at the Medical College of Georgia at ...

Using AI, USC researchers pioneer a potential new immunotherapy approach for treating glioblastoma

2024-08-01
In an innovative new study of glioblastoma, scientists used artificial intelligence (AI) to reprogram cancer cells, converting them into dendritic cells (DCs), which can identify cancer cells and direct other immune cells to kill them. Glioblastoma is the most common brain cancer in adults and also the deadliest, with less than 10% of patients surviving five years after their diagnosis. While new approaches such as immunotherapy have revolutionized treatment for other cancers, they have done little for patients with glioblastoma. That is partly because these hard-to-reach brain tumors ...

High blood pressure associated with environmental contamination by tellurium

High blood pressure associated with environmental contamination by tellurium
2024-08-01
The likelihood of developing high blood pressure (hypertension) increases with higher levels of tellurium, a contaminant transferred from mining and manufacturing activities to foods. Improved monitoring of tellurium levels in specific foods could help decrease high blood pressure in the general population. The results of a study examining the relationship between tellurium exposure and hypertension were published in the journal Environment International.    The study was led by Nagoya University in Japan. According to Takumi Kagawa, one of the researchers involved in the ...

Pursuing the middle path to scientific discovery

Pursuing the middle path to scientific discovery
2024-08-01
In electronic technologies, key material properties change in response to stimuli like voltage or current. Scientists aim to understand these changes in terms of the material’s structure at the nanoscale (a few atoms) and microscale (the thickness of a piece of paper). Often neglected is the realm between, the mesoscale — spanning 10 billionths to 1 millionth of a meter. Scientists at the U.S. Department of Energy’s (DOE) Argonne National Laboratory, in collaboration with Rice University and DOE’s Lawrence ...

Salk awarded $3.6 million by the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine to advance research on brain aging

Salk awarded $3.6 million by the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine to advance research on brain aging
2024-08-01
LA JOLLA (July 31, 2024)—The Salk Institute was awarded $3.6 million by the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM), one of the world’s largest institutions dedicated to regenerative medicine. Salk Professor Rusty Gage will lead the new CIRM-funded Shared Resources Laboratory focused on stem cell-based models of aging and neurodegeneration. The award is part of CIRM’s latest round of funding to address challenges in the regenerative medicine field. The state agency dedicated $27 million to help establish six new Shared Resources ...

Generation X and millennials in US have higher risk of developing 17 cancers compared to older generations, new study suggests

Generation X and millennials in US have higher risk of developing 17 cancers compared to older generations, new study suggests
2024-08-01
A new large study led by researchers at the American Cancer Society (ACS) suggests incidence rates continued to rise in successively younger generations in 17 of the 34 cancer types, including breast, pancreatic, and gastric cancers. Mortality trends also increased in conjunction with the incidence of liver (female only), uterine corpus, gallbladder, testicular, and colorectal cancers. The report will be published today in the journal The Lancet Public Health. “These findings add to growing evidence of increased cancer risk in post-Baby Boomer ...

Around 160,000 joint replacement surgeries lost by COVID-19 pandemic, study finds

2024-08-01
Nearly nine months of joint replacement surgery has been lost - around 160,000 fewer operations –  since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, a new study led by the University of Bristol has found.  The research suggests returning to pre-pandemic levels will not tackle the backlog, and even with rapid expansion, it will take many years, if not decades, to fix this joint replacement crisis. The study, published in The Bone & Joint Journal today [1 August], looked in detail at the effect ...

Public health measures that reduce dementia risk could save up to £4bn

2024-07-31
Public health interventions that tackle dementia risk factors could yield as much as £4bn in savings in England by reducing dementia rates and helping people to live longer and healthier, finds a new study led by UCL researchers. The study, published in The Lancet Healthy Longevity, shows that interventions – such as reformulating food products to reduce sugar and salt intake, introducing low emission zones to improve air quality in cities, and minimum alcohol unit pricing to reduce drinking – could have extensive benefits beyond just the health outcomes they are directly targeting. Lead author Dr Naaheed Mukadam (UCL Psychiatry) ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Flaring black hole whips up ultra-fast winds

Study explores the link between newspaper preference and attitudes towards autism

Artificial turf in the Nordic climate – a question of sustainability

The hidden toll of substance use disorder: annual cost of lost productivity to US economy nearly $93 billion

Among psychologists, AI use is up, but so are concerns

Recycling a pollutant to make ammonia production greener

Common institutional ownership linked to less aggressive business strategies in Chinese firms

Energy and regional factors drive carbon price volatility in China’s emissions trading markets

Researchers from NUS Medicine and the Institute of Mental Health detect early brain changes linked to future psychosis development

Cryopreserved vs liquid-stored platelets for the treatment of surgical bleeding

Cost-effectiveness of cryopreserved vs liquid-stored platelets for managing surgical bleeding

Adaptive Kalman filter boosts BDS-3 navigation accuracy in challenging environments

Home-based monitoring could transform care for patients receiving T-cell redirecting therapies

Listening to the 'whispers' of electrons and crystals: A quantum discovery

Report on academic exchange (colloquium) with Mapua University

Sport in middle childhood can breed respect for authority in adolescence

From novel therapies to first-in-human trials, City of Hope advances blood cancer care at the American Society of Hematology (ASH) annual conference

Research aims to strengthen the security of in-person voting machines

New study exposes hidden Alzheimer’s 'hot spots' in rural Maryland and what they reveal about America’s growing healthcare divide

ASH 2025: Study connects Agent Orange exposure to earlier and more severe cases of myelodysplastic syndrome

ASH 2025: New data highlights promise of pivekimab sunirine in two aggressive blood cancers ​

IADR elects George Belibasakis as vice-president

Expanding the search for quantum-ready 2D materials

White paper on leadership opportunities for AI to increase employee value released by University of Phoenix College of Doctoral Studies

ASH 2025: New combination approach aims to make CAR T more durable in lymphoma

‘Ready-made’ T-cell gene therapy tackles ‘incurable’ T-cell leukemia

How brain activity changes throughout the day

Australian scientists reveal new genetic risk for severe macular degeneration

GLP-1 receptor agonists likely have little or no effect on obesity-related cancer risk

Precision immunotherapy to improve sepsis outcomes

[Press-News.org] Predicting the future: Easy tool helps estimate fall risks
Researchers develop method to calculate the probability of a fall for older adults