By: Help the Aged
Falls are a major cause of disability and the leading cause of mortality due to injury among older people aged over 75. Are you in the risk zone?
Tip of the Month 1: Are You at Risk of Having a Fall?
Source: Help the Aged
November 6, 2002 (Reviewed: November 13, 2004)
Ask yourself these questions to find out if you are at risk of having a fall:
Did you answer yes to any of these questions? Then you may be at risk of having a fall.
An estimated 1000 older people die each year in the UK as a result of a fall on the stairs in the home. If the fall doesn't kill, it can devastate health and change an older person's quality of life and that of their family and friends forever.
Falls are a major cause of disability and the leading cause of mortality due to injury among older people aged over 75 in the UK. Nearly a fifth of older people who break their hips die, and of those that survive, less than one third regain their same level of mobility. Falls destroy confidence, increase isolation and reduce independence.
........and yet most falls are preventable.
Avoiding slips, trips and broken hips is a campaign run by Help the Aged that offers simple, practical advice to cut your risk of having a fall.

Ways to reduce your risk of having a fall:
There are other possible causes of falls in the elderly, which may not have been included in the above article. They include: poor vision, lung diseases, cardiovascular disease, bladder disorders, and conditions affecting the legs and arms, such as arthritis. To read more about them, go to: "Falls: reduce your risk" , Robert Griffith, Editor.
This Tip of the Month is a service sponsored by Help the Aged (see first link below).
Related Links
Help the Aged Website
Exercise Helps Cut Risk of Falls
Increased Vitamin A Intake May Raise the Fracture Risk
How To Avoid Falls at Home