Clinical meaning
Falls prevention at the advanced practice level integrates evidence-based clinical interventions with quality improvement methodology and implementation science. The NP leads fall prevention programs by translating Level I evidence (systematic reviews and meta-analyses) into actionable clinical protocols, measuring outcomes, and sustaining practice change. The evidence base for falls prevention is robust: the US Preventive Services Task Force (USPSTF) recommends exercise interventions for community-dwelling adults ≥65 years at increased fall risk (B recommendation). Meta-analytic evidence identifies the MOST EFFECTIVE single intervention as exercise programs that CHALLENGE BALANCE -- particularly tai chi (55% fall reduction, NNT ~7 for 1 year to prevent one fall) and the Otago Exercise Programme (35% fall reduction). MULTICOMPONENT interventions addressing multiple risk factors simultaneously are more effective than single interventions: a systematic review of 159 RCTs (Cochrane 2012, updated 2018) found that multifactorial programs reduce falls by 24% (rate ratio 0.76, 95% CI 0.67-0.86). Key intervention components with the strongest evidence include: (1) balance and strength exercise, (2) medication review and deprescribing of FRIDs, (3) vision correction, (4) home safety modification, (5) vitamin D supplementation in deficient...
