New resource: Falls among elderly

Drugs and the Risk of Falling in the Elderly—a new guideline to prevent drug-related falls—has been launched by the BC Fall and Injury Prevention Coalition. 

The guideline will assist health professionals in being proactive in the evaluation of the medications a patient is taking, ideally preventing any fall from taking place. It can also be used to assess the contribution of drugs after a fall has occurred. 

This evidence-based, peer-reviewed, concise 2-page Canadian guideline is unique.

There are two main aspects to the guideline: factual information on drugs that are a concern, and conceptual perspectives on actions to be taken. While providing you with a list of drugs proven to increase the risk of falling, the guideline also emphasizes that any drug that is causing drowsiness, dizziness, hypotension, or disorders of movement or vision can increase the risk. 

Importantly, this resource goes beyond other available lists of medications by including drugs that might worsen the outcome if a patient does fall. Warfarin, for example, is on the list because anticoagulants can contribute to cerebral hemorrhage if head trauma occurs when the patient falls.

Conceptually, the focus is on the individual patient. To emphasize the concept that drugs are just one of the risk factors for a fall, it is recommended that other known fall risk factors also be assessed, including balance, strength, and vision. 

On each visit with elderly patients, ask if they have had a slip, trip, near fall, or fall in the past 6 months and determine if they have a mobility problem. A simple assessment checklist with these and other relevant questions is provided within the guideline to help you evaluate your patient’s risk status holistically. 

The new guideline is designed for real life: there are no forbidden drugs, and there is no maximum number of allowed drugs. Instead, there are suggestions to avoid certain drugs if possible, to use the minimum effective dose, and ideally to avoid combining “risky” drugs.

The British Columbia Fall and Injury Prevention Coalition is associated with the BC Injury Research and Prevention Unit (www.injuryresearch.bc.ca) and the Centre of Excellence on Mobility, Fall Prevention and Injury in Aging (http://hiphealth.ca/CEMFIA.htm), which offer many other resources related to fall prevention on their web sites. 

As well as the new medication resource, the following may be useful to you: Best Practice Guidelines for Fall Prevention in Assisted Living; the Canadian Falls Prevention Curriculum E-learning course; the SAIL program to support the elderly living in their homes; many tools to assess the risk of falling; and a pamphlet on falls for the seniors themselves.

The guideline can be found at www.hiphealth.ca/__shared/assets/Drugs_and_the_Risk_of_Falling15714.pdf.

—Barbara Cadario, BScPhm, MSc
Clinical Assistant Professor, Faculty of Pharmaceutical Sciences, UBC
—Vicky Scott, PhD, RN
Clinical Associate Professor, School of Population and Public Health, UBC

Barbara Cadario, BSc, BScPhm, MSc, Vicky Scott, PHD,. New resource: Falls among elderly. BCMJ, Vol. 52, No. 5, June, 2010, Page(s) 268 - News.



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