Hypothermia in the elderly: scope for prevention.
- 15 August 1987
- Vol. 295 (6595) , 419-420
- https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.295.6595.419
Abstract
Concern is growing about the number of elderly people dying of hypothermia. A register was compiled of patients over 75 on a general practitioner's list who were identified from their medical records as being at risk of hypothermia, having two or more established risk factors. Twenty four patients from this register were visited early in winter by a doctor to discuss how hypothermia could be prevented. They were then revisited during very cold weather to see whether they had made any changes. Several improvements to heating arrangements were noted, but the median temperature in the bedrooms of houses with no central heating was 10 degrees C below the World Health Organisation's recommended temperature. In addition, eight patients were not visited daily. Even with media publicity and visits from carers and a doctor, 17 of the 24 elderly people studied continued to live in an environment in which they were at risk of developing hypothermia.This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- LOW INDOOR TEMPERATURES AND MORBIDITY IN THE ELDERLYAge and Ageing, 1986
- A HEALTH VISITOR AFFECTS THE PROBLEMS OTHERS DO NOT REACHThe Lancet, 1986
- Accidental hypothermiaPharmacology & Therapeutics, 1983
- Accidental hypothermia: a report of 22 cases and review of the literature.1982
- A pilot study of low body temperatures in old people admitted to hospital.1977
- Body Temperatures in the Elderly: A National Study of Physiological, Social, and Environmental ConditionsBMJ, 1973
- Accidental hypothermia.1970
- Accidental HypothermiaBMJ, 1964