“I don’t know if it makes a difference to safety?” perception vs actuality: A mixed-methods study on older adults’ experiences of home stair falls revealed during COVID-19 lockdown
Emily Wharton, Thomas O’Brien, Richard J. Foster, Clarissa Giebel, Justine Shenton, Asan Akpan, Avril Mills, Mike Roys, Constantinos Maganaris, Andrew Curtis, Andrew Curtis, Andrew Curtis

TL;DR
This study explores how older adults in the UK perceive and experience home stair safety during the COVID-19 lockdown, revealing a mismatch between their perceptions and actual stair safety.
Contribution
The study uniquely combines mixed methods to reveal discrepancies between perceived and actual stair safety in older adults' homes during lockdown.
Findings
Nearly 40% of participants' stairs did not meet UK government safety guidelines despite being perceived as safe.
Lockdown conditions highlighted ongoing issues with home stair safety, environmental hazards, and aging in place.
Financial constraints and lack of education hinder efforts to improve home safety for older adults.
Abstract
In the United Kingdom (UK), stair falls in older adults’ homes cause up to 575 deaths and 350,000 injuries annually, costing the NHS £435 million. The stair falls may be related to hazards such as poorly designed/absent handrails, too steep/narrow stairs, poor step surface (e.g., loose carpets), and poor lighting. Our study aimed to understand older adults’ experiences of independent living and home stair falls during the first COVID-19 lockdown, and shed light on older adults’ physical staircase dimensions that influence stair fall risks in relation to UK government guidelines. A mixed-methods approach was employed, conducting semi-structured interviews alongside quantitative home stair assessments with 22 participants aged ≥ 60 years. The stair assessments captured the physical dimensions (i.e., measurements of pitch, rise and goings) of their home stairs, and if they perceived their…
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Taxonomy
TopicsBalance, Gait, and Falls Prevention · Urban Green Space and Health · Injury Epidemiology and Prevention
