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Volume 8
Journal of Palliative Care & Medicine
ISSN: 2165-7386
Geriatrics 2018
July 30-31, 2018
July 30-31, 2018 | Barcelona, Spain
8
th
International Conference on
Geriatrics Gerontology & Palliative Nursing
Development of an application for mobile devices to evaluate the balance and risk of falls of the
elderly
Luisa Veríssimo Pereira Sampaio
Catholic University of Brasília, Brazil
Abstract:
Aging is defined as a natural and physiological process that progressively accompanies the life cycle. As well as
psychosocial complications, physical losses also occur, resulting in slow reasoning, depression, functional disability, loss of
strength, inactivity and physical degeneration. The application of the functional tests is intended to aid clinical evaluation by
providing data on the patient's mobility capacity and revealing possible balance deficits. The use of smartphones in health is
growing as it provides professionals with more agility and flexibility in their work, from the time of data collection to the use
of applications that assist with patient evaluation. The sensors embedded in these devices are increasingly being used in the
evaluation of balance and gait. One of these sensors is the accelerometer, which has the potential to aid clinical procedures,
offering quantitative data for assessment and balance and gait training.
Objective:
to develop an application for mobile devices to evaluate the balance and risk of falls of the elderly.
Method:
A cross-sectional study with a sample composed of 54 elderly individuals with an average age of 71 years submitted
to three balance and risk of falls evaluation tests, was performed. The Timed Up and Go (TUG) and Performance Oriented
Mobility Assessment (POMA) tests were employed.
Results:
The results were closely correlated, identifying three groups of volunteers: low, medium and high risk of falls. When
these values were compared with the analyzes performed by the application, some of the variations in the results generated by
the application were not related to the classic tests, as the software could discriminate between individuals with a high and low
risk of falls.
Conclusion:
The developed application was able to verify the oscillations present in the maintenance of static balance of the
elderly and could differentiate the results into two groups of high and low risk of falls.
ft.luisa.verissimo@gmail.comJ Palliat Care Med 2018, Volume 8
DOI: 10.4172/2165-7386-C2-018