Skip to main content

Tips for Fall Prevention

September 20, 2021

Falls can cause injury and concern, take steps to decrease your risk.

Three million older adults will require hospitalization because of a fall each year and two out of three people who fell will fall again within six months. The fear of falling leads to decreased mobility, limited function and altered social interaction—all of which are factors to additional falls.

Tracy Rochester, PT, MSPT, CCCE, a senior physical therapist at MelroseWakefield Hospital, offers the following tips to decrease your risk of a fall:

  1. Get your vision checked: Improper eyewear and decline in vision due to cataracts or glaucoma can lead to falls.
  2. Discuss medications with your doctor: Multiple medications can have possible side effects or drug interactions that can cause increased fall risk.
  3. Learn about osteoporosis risk factors: Increase calcium and vitamin D into your diet or via supplements. Weight-bearing exercises can help to promote bone growth.
  4. Eliminate household hazards: Rugs, poor lighting, lack of proper handrails on stairs and lack of grab bars/raised toilet/shower chair can increase your fall risk. Leave a small night light on in both the bedroom and bathroom to assist with safety when getting up in the middle of the night.
  5. Focus on balance and strength training: Try standing leg exercises at the kitchen counter, yoga, Tai Chi or even seated exercises. Practice standing up from a seated position without using your hands. Go for a walk with friends or family!

MelroseWakefield Hospital also offers healthcare education programs aimed at fall prevention, including Aging in Balance.

MENTIONED IN THIS PAGE:
Healthy Podcast
Caring for Those with Dementia – Drs. Brent Forester and James Lech
June 17, 2024
Dementia is known a family disease because of the ways it affects not only the person, but also friends and family who are caregivers.
Patient Stories
Alex Cabrera’s Patient Journey at Tufts Medical Center
April 7, 2023
Alex Cabrera was leaving school on a sunny day near the end of his eighth-grade year when he was hit by a car. The Waltham native had to be airlifted to Tufts Medical Center and by morning was undergoing life-saving brain surgery.
Patient Stories
Facial Nerve Paralysis Clinic Gives Hope to Bell’s Palsy Patient
September 27, 2022
Sixty-year-old Mary D. of Winthrop recalls waking up one morning two years ago over the New Year’s holiday and immediately realizing something wasn’t right. “My face felt a little funny,” she says. “I was putting on makeup and couldn’t close my eye correctly. By the end of the day, it was much worse.”

Be among the first to know

Enjoy the latest health updates from Tufts Medicine by signing up for our e-newsletter today.

Jump back to top