Falls are the leading cause of injury and injury-related death in adults aged 65 and over, affecting roughly one in three community-dwelling older adults and one in two over age 80 each year. The World Health Organization estimates 684,000 fall-related deaths and 37 million falls requiring medical attention globally per year.
Falls in elderly (ICD-10: R29.6 history of falling; W19 unspecified fall) describes the syndrome of unintentional descent to a lower level not from a major mechanical force, occurring in older adults aged 65 and over. The World Health Organization defines a fall as an event resulting in a person coming to rest inadvertently on the ground, floor, or other lower level. Falls are classified into accidental (typically a single environmental cause), recurrent (two or more in 12 months), and injurious. The clinical entity is a geriatric syndrome, where a final common pathway (loss of balance, postural reflex failure) results from multiple interacting impairments rather than a single disease.
The key symptoms of Falls in Elderly are: Loss of balance with or without injury, with the patient ending up on the floor., Bruising, lacerations, or pain after the fall, most often over the hip, shoulder, head, or wrist., Inability to weight-bear suggesting hip or femoral neck fracture., Confusion, drowsiness, or amnesia for the event, especially if head impact occurred — exclude intracranial bleeding., Fear of falling and reduced confidence in mobility, leading to avoidance of activities (post-fall syndrome)., Multiple falls or near-falls in the preceding year., Difficulty getting up from the floor without assistance after a fall (functional reach impairment)..
Assessment starts with the post-fall consultation in primary care or the emergency department. The history asks: timing, location, witnesses, prodromal symptoms (light-headedness, palpitations, chest pain, focal weakness, loss of consciousness), injury, ability to get up, and prior falls. Examination includes lying and standing blood pressure (after 1 and 3 minutes), pulse rhythm and rate, neurological examination, cognition (Mini-Cog, MMSE, MoCA), vision and hearing screen, foot and footwear inspection, and functional testing with the Timed Up and Go (over 12-14 seconds suggests increased falls risk), 4-metre gait speed (under 0.8 m/s), 30-second chair stand, and the Berg Balance Scale or short physical performance battery. ECG is mandatory after any syncopal or unexplained fall; tilt-table testing and prolonged ECG monitoring are reserved for refractory cases. Cardiac causes (atrial fibrillation, conduction disease, aortic stenosis) need echocardiography. Medication review uses STOPP/START or Beers criteria to identify high-risk drugs. Blood tests target reversible contributors: full blood count, electrolytes, urea, creatinine, glucose, HbA1c, vitamin D, B12, folate, ferritin, calcium, and TSH. Imaging follows clinical suspicion — CT head for any head injury with anticoagulation or persistent symptoms; pelvic X-ray for hip pain; spine imaging for vertebral tenderness or neurology. Home assessment by an occupational therapist identifies and remedies environmental hazards. The CDC STEADI algorithm, World Falls Guidelines 2022, and NICE CG161 each integrate these elements into a structured pathway for assessment, intervention, and follow-up.
About 5-10% of falls cause serious injury (hip fracture, traumatic brain injury, major laceration). Hip fracture has a 30-day mortality of 5-8% and 1-year mortality of 20-30%, with only 50-60% of survivors regaining baseline function. Fear of falling develops in 30-50% of fallers and triples the risk of activity restriction, disability, and residential care admission. Multifactorial assessment with tailored intervention reduces falls by 24-39% and injurious falls by similar amounts. Otago and tai chi programmes reduce falls by 19-35%. Cataract surgery on the first eye reduces falls by 34%. Medication review with deprescribing reduces falls by 20-30%. Coordinated post-fall rehabilitation halves the rate of repeat falls in the following year. The strongest predictors of poor outcome are dementia, severe frailty, polypharmacy, low body weight, and untreated osteoporosis. Even after an injurious fall, structured rehabilitation, bone protection, and falls prevention restore function and independence in most older adults.
Refer to a falls clinic or geriatric medicine service after any of the following: two or more falls in 12 months, an injurious fall, a syncopal fall, fall with cognitive impairment, recurrent unexplained falls, or failure of primary-care multifactorial intervention. Cardiologist input is needed for syncopal falls with abnormal ECG or echocardiography findings.
Find specialists →Soft tissue injuries from minor falls recover within 1-3 weeks. Hip-fracture rehabilitation runs 3-6 months, with the most rapid functional recovery in the first 6-12 weeks. Strength and balance training reduces falls by 12-24 weeks. Vision and medication interventions show effect within 4-12 weeks. Long-term maintenance requires continued exercise and regular review.
Aim for resistance training 2-3 times weekly (legs, arms, trunk), balance work daily or near-daily (tai chi, Otago exercises, single-leg stance), and aerobic activity (brisk walking, cycling) on most days for at least 30 minutes. Group exercise classes encourage adherence and social engagement. Supervised programmes are preferable for high-risk adults; home programmes work for many community-dwelling older adults with adequate instruction.
Choose a falls clinic with a geriatrician-led multidisciplinary team (physiotherapy, occupational therapy, pharmacy). Confirm the service offers structured exercise prescription (Otago, tai chi), medication deprescribing, home hazard assessment, and bone-health management. Ask about same-day access for high-risk patients and falls registry follow-up.
Medically reviewed by AIHealz Medical Editorial Board · May 13, 2026
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