Diagnostics & workup:
- Population-level fall rate monitoring: calculate fall rate per 1000 patient-days for the unit/practice; benchmark against national averages (3-5 falls per 1000 patient-days in acute care, lower in community settings); stratify by severity (no injury, minor injury, serious injury); track trends over time to evaluate program effectiveness
- STEADI algorithm implementation assessment: audit the proportion of patients ≥65 years who receive annual fall risk screening using the 3 STEADI questions; audit the proportion of positive screens who receive comprehensive multifactorial assessment; audit the proportion of assessed patients with documented individualized fall prevention plan -- each step represents a quality gap to address
- Root cause analysis of fall events: systematically investigate each fall (or at minimum, falls with injury) to identify contributing factors: patient factors (new medication, delirium, unassisted ambulation attempt), environmental factors (wet floor, high bed, call light out of reach), system factors (staffing, missed rounding, communication failures); aggregate data to identify patterns
- Process measures for fall prevention compliance: measure and trend: (1) proportion of patients with fall risk assessment on admission, (2) proportion of high-risk patients with targeted interventions documented, (3) hourly rounding compliance rates, (4) medication review completion rates, (5) vitamin D supplementation rates in deficient patients, (6) PT referral rates for gait-impaired patients
- Balancing measures: monitor for unintended consequences of fall prevention interventions -- excessive activity restriction (leading to deconditioning and INCREASED fall risk), inappropriate restraint use, patient dissatisfaction from alarm fatigue, and over-testing (unnecessary imaging after minor falls)
- Pre-post intervention outcome analysis: when implementing a new fall prevention program, collect baseline fall rate data for at least 6 months before implementation, then measure fall rates after implementation; use statistical process control (SPC) charts to distinguish true improvement from random variation
Risk factors:
- Evidence-practice gap in fall prevention: despite Level I evidence supporting multicomponent fall prevention, implementation rates remain <50% in primary care; barriers include time constraints, lack of systematic screening, fragmented referral processes, and insufficient follow-up to ensure interventions are sustained
- Failure to implement systematic screening: without routine fall risk screening (e.g., STEADI algorithm), high-risk patients are not identified and preventive interventions are not initiated; screening must be embedded in workflow (annual wellness visit, hospital admission, post-fall assessment) rather than relying on opportunistic identification
- Single-factor intervention approach: addressing only one risk factor (e.g., prescribing vitamin D without addressing gait impairment, medications, vision, and home safety) is less effective than a comprehensive multifactorial approach; the NP must address ALL modifiable risk factors simultaneously
- Inadequate exercise prescription specificity: 'exercise more' is not an adequate recommendation; fall prevention exercise must specifically CHALLENGE BALANCE (tai chi, tandem walking, single-leg standing) and build lower extremity strength; walking alone does NOT reduce falls
- Lack of sustained follow-up: fall prevention interventions lose efficacy when they are not maintained; exercise benefits dissipate within 6-12 months of stopping; deprescribed medications may be restarted by other providers; home modifications may be incomplete; the NP must ensure long-term follow-through
- Community resource gaps: patients may lack access to evidence-based exercise programs (tai chi classes, Otago-trained physical therapists), home modification services, or transportation to attend programs; the NP must identify and connect patients with available community resources
- Staff knowledge and engagement: nursing staff may not understand the evidence base for specific fall prevention interventions or may view falls as inevitable in elderly patients; the NP leads education and culture change to promote evidence-based fall prevention as a clinical priority