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Assessment of Slip Severity Among Different Age Groups
Author(s) -
Thurmon E. Lockhart,
JC Woldstad,
JL Smith
Publication year - 2003
Publication title -
digital commons - university of nebraska lincoln (university of nebraska–lincoln)
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Book series
DOI - 10.1520/stp10737s
Subject(s) - slip (aerodynamics) , age groups , medicine , young adult , physical medicine and rehabilitation , demography , gerontology , engineering , aerospace engineering , sociology
A laboratory study utilizing new techniques for assessing slip severity was conducted to investigate the process of inadvertent slips and falls among different age groups. Fortytwo subjects from three age groups (young adults, middle-aged, and the elderly) walked on a rectangular track at a self-determined pace. Without the subjects’ awareness, a slippery floor surface was placed on the track over a force-measuring platform. The results indicated that elderly adults’ friction demand (RCOF) was not significantly different from the young and middle-aged adults. The older adults, however, fell more often than the other age groups. Fall recovery threshold (FRT) measures indicated that younger adults were able to recover from a slip (thus preventing a fall) with higher sliding speeds and longer slip distances than older adults. Additionally, older adults’ adjusted friction utilization (AFU) on the slippery floor surface was not adjusted within the dynamic friction requirements, resulting in more falls. Based on the age-related differences observed, it appears that fall-related accidents among older adults are due more to factors influencing compensation of a slip rather than gait characteristics influencing slip initiation.

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