Stay Active as You Age
Exercise Can Help Reduce Fall Risk in Older Adults
Falls Are Common—but Risk Can Often Be Reduced
Falls in later life can cause fractures, head injuries, fear of movement, loss of confidence, and reduced independence. Risk is usually influenced by several factors at the same time, such as muscle weakness, impaired balance or walking, certain medicines, low blood pressure, vision problems, footwear, pain, neurological conditions, and environmental hazards.
Exercise Is Important, but It Is Not a Stand-Alone Guarantee
A well-designed exercise programme can reduce fall risk for many older adults, especially when it includes progressive balance, functional movement, and muscle-strengthening work. Exercise should be matched to the person’s current health, mobility, confidence, previous falls, and goals. For people at higher risk, professional assessment and supervised progression are often appropriate.
Key Components of a Fall-Prevention Exercise Programme
- Balance and functional training: Activities may include supported weight shifting, controlled reaching, stepping in different directions, turning, and practising everyday transfers. Single-leg standing or unstable-surface work should only be used when safe and appropriately supported.
- Strength and power: Exercises such as sit-to-stand, supported heel raises, wall push-ups, and resistance-band work may help improve the capacity needed for walking, transfers, and recovering balance. Resistance and repetitions should be progressed gradually.
- Walking and gait practice: Walking supports general health and mobility, but walking alone may not adequately address fall risk in someone with poor balance or weakness. Gait practice may need to include pace changes, turning, obstacle awareness, and correct use of an assistive device.
- Flexibility and joint movement: Gentle stretching may support comfort and movement when stiffness limits function. Stretching alone is not considered a complete fall-prevention programme.
- Aerobic activity: Walking, stationary cycling, dancing, or other suitable aerobic activity can support heart health and endurance. Intensity should allow safe breathing and conversation unless a clinician has provided different instructions.
Examples That May Be Suitable
- Walking: Begin with a manageable duration on a level, well-lit route. Use prescribed footwear or walking aids and avoid rushing, uneven surfaces, and multitasking when these increase risk.
- Tai chi or adapted yoga: These may provide slow, controlled balance and body-awareness practice. Choose an adapted class and use a stable support when needed; not every pose is suitable for every person.
- Chair-based and resistance exercise: Sit-to-stand practice, seated marching, wall push-ups, and light resistance may be useful when selected and progressed according to ability.
- Aquatic exercise: Water may reduce joint loading and support general fitness, but safe pool access, transfers, supervision, skin condition, continence, heart or lung conditions, and infection risk must be considered.
- Stretching: Use gentle, controlled movements without bouncing or forcing. Stop if stretching causes sharp pain, dizziness, numbness, or increasing symptoms.
How Often?
General public-health guidance for older adults includes regular aerobic activity, muscle-strengthening on at least 2 days per week, and multicomponent activity that emphasises functional balance and strength on 3 or more days per week. These are population-level goals, not a prescription for every individual. Someone who is frail, recently unwell, recovering from surgery or fracture, or at high risk of falling may need a shorter, lower-intensity, closely supervised starting plan.
Exercise Should Be Combined with a Broader Fall-Risk Review
- previous falls, near-falls, fear of falling, and difficulty getting up from the floor
- medicines that may cause sleepiness, low blood pressure, dizziness, or urgency
- vision, hearing, sensation, foot pain, footwear, and walking aids
- blood pressure changes on standing, heart rhythm symptoms, hydration, and nutrition
- home or care-environment hazards such as poor lighting, loose rugs, clutter, steps, and bathroom surfaces
- osteoporosis, fracture history, neurological conditions, arthritis, and other health conditions
Safety Before and During Exercise
- Use stable footwear, a clear area, suitable lighting, and a sturdy support when needed.
- Start below the person’s maximum capacity and increase one element at a time—duration, repetitions, resistance, speed, or task complexity.
- Avoid unsupervised one-leg standing, rapid direction changes, or floor exercises when getting down or up is unsafe.
- Do not exercise through sharp pain, new weakness, severe dizziness, fainting, chest pain, unusual breathlessness, sudden severe headache, or a new change in speech, vision, balance, or coordination.
- After a recent fall, fracture, surgery, acute illness, or meaningful change in function, obtain clinical advice before restarting or progressing.
Confidence and Emotional Well-Being
Fear of falling can lead to avoiding movement, which may contribute to further weakness and isolation. A gradual programme with achievable goals, shared decision-making, and respectful encouragement may help some older adults rebuild confidence. Exercise is not a substitute for assessment or treatment of depression, anxiety, or persistent fear.
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: Should every older adult do the same fall-prevention exercises?
A: No. The programme should be based on individual fall risk, medical conditions, mobility, cognition, pain, confidence, environment, and goals.
Q: Is walking enough to prevent falls?
A: Walking is valuable for health and mobility, but people with balance impairment or weakness usually need specific balance and strengthening work as well.
Q: How quickly will balance improve?
A: There is no guaranteed timeline. Improvement depends on the starting level, programme quality, progression, adherence, health conditions, and whether other fall risks are addressed.
Q: What is suitable for knee osteoarthritis?
A: Low-impact options may include supported strengthening, stationary cycling, selected aquatic exercise, and controlled range-of-motion work. Pain, swelling, alignment, and individual tolerance should guide the plan.
The Goal Is Safer, More Confident Movement
Regular, appropriately progressed activity can support mobility, strength, balance, independence, and overall health. The safest approach combines individualized exercise with attention to medicines, vision, footwear, assistive devices, health conditions, and the environment. Starting small is worthwhile; progress should remain realistic, measurable, and safe.
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