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108th CONGRESS
1st Session
S. 1217
To direct the
Secretary of Health and Human Services to expand and intensify programs
with respect to research and related activities concerning elder falls.
IN THE SENATE OF THE
UNITED STATES
June 9, 2003
Mr. ENZI (for
himself and Ms. MIKULSKI) introduced the following bill; which was read
twice and referred to the Committee on Health, Education, Labor, and
Pensions
A BILL
To direct the
Secretary of Health and Human Services to expand and intensify programs
with respect to research and related activities concerning elder falls.
Be it enacted by the
Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in
Congress assembled,
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
This Act may be
cited as the `Elder Fall Prevention Act of 2003'.
SEC. 2. FINDINGS.
The Congress finds
as follows:
(1) Falls are the
leading cause of injury deaths among individuals who are over 65 years
of age.
(2) By 2030, the
population of individuals who are 65 years of age or older will double.
By 2050, the population of individuals who are 85 years of age or older
will quadruple.
(3) In 2000, falls
among elderly individuals accounted for 10,200 deaths and 1,600,000
emergency department visits.
(4) Sixty percent of
fall-related deaths occur among individuals who are 75 years of age or
older.
(5) Twenty-five
percent of elderly persons who sustain a hip fracture die within 1 year.
(6) Hospital
admissions for hip fractures among the elderly have increased from
231,000 admissions in 1988 to 332,000 in 1999. The number of hip
fractures is expected to exceed 500,000 by 2040.
(7) Annually, more
than 64,000 individuals who are over 65 years of age sustain a traumatic
brain injury as a result of a fall.
(8) Annually, 40,000
individuals who are over 65 years of age visit emergency departments
with traumatic brain injuries suffered as a result of a fall, of which
16,000 of these individual are hospitalized and 4,000 of these
individuals die.
(9) The rate of
fall-induced traumatic brain injuries for individual who are 80 years of
age or older increased by 60 percent from 1989 to 1998.
(10) The estimated
total cost for non-fatal traumatic brain injury-related hospitalizations
for falls in individuals who are 65 years of age or older is more than
$3,250,000,000. Two-thirds of these costs occurred among individual who
were 75 years of age or older.
(11) The costs to
the Medicare and Medicaid programs and society as a whole from falls by
elderly persons continue to climb much faster than inflation and
population growth. Direct costs alone will exceed $32,000,000,000 in
2020.
(12) The Federal
Government should devote additional resources to research regarding the
prevention and treatment of falls in residential as well as
institutional settings.
(13) A national
approach to reducing elder falls, which focuses on the daily life of
senior citizens in residential, institutional, and community settings is
needed. The approach should include a wide range of organizations and
individuals including family members, health care providers, social
workers, architects, employers and others.
(14) Reducing
preventable adverse events, such as elder falls, is an important aspect
to the agenda to improve patient safety.
SEC. 3. AMENDMENT TO THE PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICE ACT.
Title III of the
Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. 241 et seq.) is amended by adding
at the end the following:
`PART R--PREVENTION OF ELDER FALLS
`SEC. 399AA. PURPOSES
`The purposes of
this title are--
`(1) to develop
effective public education strategies in a national initiative to reduce
elder falls in order to educate the elders themselves, family members,
employers, caregivers, and others who touch the lives of senior
citizens;
`(2) to expand
needed services and conduct research to determine the most effective
approaches to preventing and treating elder falls; and
`(3) to require the
Secretary to evaluate the effect of falls on the costs of medicare and
medicaid and the potential for reducing costs by expanding education,
prevention, and elderly intervention services covered under these two
programs.
`SEC. 399AA-1. PUBLIC EDUCATION.
`Subject to the
availability of appropriations, the Administration on Aging within the
Department of Health and Human Services shall--
`(1) oversee and
support a three-year national education campaign to be carried out by
the National Safety Council to be directed principally to elders, their
families, and health care providers and focusing on ways of reducing the
risk of elder falls and preventing repeat falls; and
`(2) provide grants
to qualified organizations and institutions for the purpose of
organizing State-level coalitions of appropriate State and local
agencies, safety, health, senior citizen and other organizations to
design and carry out local education campaigns, focusing on ways of
reducing the risk of elder falls and preventing repeat falls.
`SEC. 399AA-2. RESEARCH.
`(a) IN GENERAL-
Subject to the availability of appropriations, the Secretary shall--
`(1) conduct and
support research to--
`(A) improve the
identification of elders who have a high risk of falling;
`(B) improve data
collection and analysis to identify fall risk and protective factors;
`(C) design,
implement, and evaluate fall prevention interventions to identify the
most effective of the numerous potential strategies available;
`(D) improve
strategies that are proven to be effective in reducing falls by
tailoring these strategies to specific elderly populations;
`(E) conduct
research in order to maximize the dissemination of proven, effective
fall prevention interventions;
`(F) expand proven
interventions to prevent elder falls;
`(G) improve the
diagnosis, treatment, and rehabilitation of elderly fall victims; and
`(H) assess the risk
of falls occurring in various settings;
`(2) conduct
research concerning barriers to the adoption of proven interventions
with respect to the prevention of elder falls (such as medication review
and vision enhancement);
`(3) conduct
research to develop, implement, and evaluate the most effective
approaches to reducing falls among very high risk elders living in
nursing homes, assisted living, and other types of long-term care
facilities; and
`(4) evaluate the
effectiveness of community programs to prevent assisted living and
nursing home falls by elders.
`(b) ADMINISTRATION-
In carrying out subsection (a), the Secretary shall--
`(1) conduct
research and surveillance activities among community-dwelling and
institutionalized elders through the Director of the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention;
`(2) conduct
research related to elder fall prevention in health care delivery
settings and clinical treatment and rehabilitation of elderly fall
victims through the Director of the Agency for Healthcare Research and
Quality; and
`(3) ensure the
coordination of the activities described in paragraphs (1) and (2).
`(c) GRANTS- The
Secretary shall award grants to qualified organizations and institutions
to enable such organizations and institutions to provide professional
education for physicians and allied health professionals in elder fall
prevention.
`SEC. 399AA-3. DEMONSTRATION PROJECTS.
`Subject to the
availability of appropriations, the Secretary, acting through the
Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and in
consultation with the Director of the Agency for Healthcare Research and
Quality, shall carry out the following:
`(1) Oversee and
support demonstration and research projects to be carried out by the
National Safety Council and other qualified organizations in the
following areas:
`(A) A multi-State
demonstration project assessing the utility of targeted fall risk
screening and referral programs.
`(B) Programs
designed for community-dwelling elderly individuals that shall utilize
multi-component fall intervention approaches, including physical
activity, medication assessment and reduction when possible, vision
enhancement, and home modification strategies.
`(C) Programs
targeting newly-discharged fall victims who are at a high risk for
second falls, which shall include modification projects available to
various living settings (in accordance with accepted building codes and
standards) and which are designed to maximize independence and quality
of life for elders, particularly those elders with functional
limitations.
`(D) Private sector
and public-private partnerships to develop technology to prevent falls
and prevent or reduce injuries if falls occur.
`(2)(A) Provide
grants to qualified organizations and institutions to design, implement,
and evaluate fall prevention programs using proven intervention
strategies in residential and institutional settings.
`(B) Provide one or
more grants to one or more qualified applicants in order to carry out a
multi-State demonstration project to implement and evaluate fall
prevention programs using proven intervention strategies designed for
multi-family residential settings with high concentrations of elders,
including identifying high risk populations, evaluating residential
facilities, conducting screening to identify high risk individuals,
providing pre-fall counseling, coordinating services with health care
and social service providers and coordinating post-fall treatment and
rehabilitation.
`(C) Provide one or
more grants to qualified applicants to conduct evaluations of the
effectiveness of the demonstration projects in this section.
`SEC. 399AA-4. REVIEW OF REIMBURSEMENT POLICIES.
`(a) IN GENERAL- The
Secretary shall undertake a review of the effects of falls on the costs
of the medicare and medicaid programs and the potential for reducing
costs by expanding services covered by these two programs. This review
shall include a review of the reimbursement policies of the medicare and
medicaid programs in order to determine if additional fall-related
education, prevention, and early prevention services should be covered
or reimbursement guidelines should be modified.
`(b) REPORT- Not
later than 18 months after the date of the enactment of this title, the
Secretary shall submit to the Congress a report describing the findings
of the Secretary in conducting the review under subsection (a).
`SEC. 399AA-5. AUTHORIZATION OF APPROPRIATION.
`In order to carry
out this title, there are authorized to be appropriated--
`(1) to carry out
the national public education provisions described in section
399AA-1(1), $5,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2004 through 2006;
`(2) to carry out
the State public education campaign provisions of section 399AA-1(2),
$8,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2004 through 2006;
`(3) to carry out
research projects described in section 399AA-2, $10,000,000 for each of
fiscal years 2004 through 2006;
`(4) to carry out
the demonstration projects described in section 399AA-3(1), $7,000,000
for each of fiscal years 2004 through 2006; and
`(5) to carry out
the demonstration and research projects described in section 399AA-3(2),
$8,000,000 for each of fiscal years 2004 through 2006.'.
END
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