Applied Evidence

How to identify balance disorders and reduce fall risk

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In our experience, most patients with imbalance and who are at risk of falls do not have a detectable deficit of the vestibular system.

Research abounds into the validity of commonly used FRATs across institutions, patient populations, and clinical environments:

The Johns Hopkins FRATa determines risk using metrics such as age, fall history, incontinence, cognition, mobility, and medications75; it is predominantly used for assessment in hospital inpatient units. This tool has been validated repeatedly.76,77

Peninsula Health FRATb stratifies patients in subacute and residential aged-care settings, based on risk factors that include recent falls, medications, psychological status, and cognition.78

FRAT-upc is a web-based tool that generates falls risk using risk factors that users input. This tool has been studied in the context of patients older than 65 years living in the community.79

Although FRATs are reasonably useful for predicting falls, their utility varies by patient population and clinical context. Moreover, it has been suggested that FRATs neglect environmental and personal factors when assessing risk by focusing primarily on bodily factors.80 Implementing a FRAT requires extensive consideration of the target population and should be accompanied by clinical judgment that is grounded in an individual patient’s circumstances.81

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