Medicine
Volume 37, Issue 2 , Pages 84-87, February 2009

Falls

Rose A Kenny MB BCh MD FRCPI FRCP is Professor of Medical Gerontology at Trinity College and Director of the Falls and Blackout Unit at St James's Hospital, Dublin, Ireland. She co-chairs the Panel on Falls Prevention of the American Geriatrics Society and the British Geriatrics Society. Competing interests: none declared

Roman Romero-Ortuno Lic Med (Barcelona)MSc MRCP (UK) is Research Registrar at the Department of Medical Gerontology, Trinity College Dublin, Ireland. His research interests include psychological and social aspects of falls. Competing interests: none declared

Lisa Cogan MB BCh MSc MRCPI is Research Registrar at the Department of Medical Gerontology of Trinity College Dublin, Ireland. Her research interests include neurological and cardiovascular aspects of falls. Competing interests: none declared

Abstract 

Falls in older people are very common and for some the consequences can be devastating. The clinical assessment, management and investigation of patients who present with falls can be challenging for the non-specialist, and multiple guidelines and algorithms have been published to aid that process. This article has been prepared as a concise reference that reviews the most recent evidence and covers the medical competencies on falls outlined in the Curriculum for General Internal Medicine (Acute) of the Federation of Royal Colleges of Physicians of the UK. As in the curriculum, the emphasis is on the acute setting. Important topics covered include the epidemiology of falls, definition and classification, causes and risk factors, cumulative effect of risk factors and the concept of individual falling threshold, physical and psychosocial consequences of falling, medical falls assessment in the acute setting, differentiation between falls and syncope, principles of multifactorial falls assessment and intervention, teamwork and communication skills, and evidence-based strategies for prevention, including latest developments in falls prevention research.

Keywords: accidental falls, diagnosis, disease management, evidence-based medicine, geriatric assessment, practice guidelines as topic, prevention, quality of life, syncope

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PII: S1357-3039(08)00329-0

doi:10.1016/j.mpmed.2008.11.005

Medicine
Volume 37, Issue 2 , Pages 84-87, February 2009