NICE Issues Updated Falls Prevention Guidelines for Older Adults

NICE Issues Updated Falls Prevention Guidelines for Older Adults

New guidance extends risk assessment recommendations to care homes and hospitals, aiming to reduce falls-related injuries across all healthcare settings.

Healthcare professionals across Kent are implementing updated falls prevention guidelines that could help save lives and reduce serious injuries among older residents. The National Institute for Health and Care Excellence has strengthened its guidance on falls assessment, now formally extending recommendations beyond home environments to include care homes, hospitals and community healthcare services.

The updated NICE guideline NG249 covers all people aged 65 and over, plus those aged 50 to 64 who face higher falls risk. It’s a significant shift – for the first time, NICE has explicitly included institutional care settings in its falls prevention framework.

The Numbers Behind the Challenge

Falls represent a major public health concern, with historical NHS estimates placing the annual cost to health and social services at £908.9 million. 63 per cent of these costs come from falls in people aged 75 and over.

But this isn’t just about money. The guidance aims to reduce “distress, pain, injury, loss of confidence, loss of independence and mortality” associated with falls. Many of the major risk factors – including balance problems, muscle weakness, medication issues, and environmental hazards – can be modified with proper intervention.

What’s Changed in Practice

Under the updated guidance, older people should be asked about falls during routine health appointments. Anyone who has fallen in the past year, reports recurrent falls, or shows problems with walking or balance should be offered a wide-ranging multifactorial assessment.

These detailed assessments should take place in specialist falls service settings, conducted by healthcare professionals with appropriate training and experience. The approach recognises that preventing falls requires looking at multiple factors together – from medication reviews to home safety checks.

Why It Matters Now

The guidance represents a system-wide approach involving primary care, hospitals, specialist services, care homes, and social care. No single intervention addresses all risk factors, which is why the multifactorial approach has become the gold standard.

Healthcare professionals note that the updated recommendations provide practical, workable guidance that fits within existing NHS services. The evidence shows significant numbers of falls can be prevented when there’s a consistent national approach to risk assessment and prevention.

Source: @bmj_latest

Key Takeaways

  • Updated NICE guidance now covers falls prevention in care homes, hospitals and community settings for the first time
  • All adults aged 65+ should be asked about falls during routine healthcare appointments
  • Multifactorial assessment is recommended for anyone who has fallen recently or shows balance problems

What This Means for Kent Residents

GP practices across Kent will be implementing the updated screening procedures during routine appointments, so expect questions about falls and balance during your next health check. If you’re over 65 or have concerns about falling, don’t wait for your next appointment – contact your GP surgery to discuss a falls risk assessment. Kent’s specialist falls services, typically based in local hospitals or community health centres, are equipped to provide detailed multifactorial assessments that could much reduce your risk of serious injury.