MedCity Influencers

Why Fall Prevention Must Be a System-Wide Priority in Healthcare Settings

Extensive planning and team support can help healthcare organizations reduce the risk of falls in hospitals. This will improve patient safety, reduce the burden on operations in inpatient treatment settings, and deliver quality care at all levels of treatment and recovery.

The problem of patient falls remains an acute safety issue in health facilities. In addition, they heighten pressure on front-line personnel since they make hospital care more costly and complicated to recover. Although frequently caused by human error, falls can be better explained by the fact that they represent symptoms of system-wide vulnerabilities in care provision.

The solution to this problem should begin with a mindset shift, in which fall prevention is a system-wide priority. It has to be integrated into healthcare practices, organizational culture, the use of technology, and the physical care setting. Patient-centered mobility planning, ongoing staff training, and responsible integration of mobility support equipment, including patient lifts, which are effective in minimizing risks during transfers and repositioning, are other aspects that effectively prevent mobility problems.

The impact of patient falls extends beyond physical health and includes emotional stress, diminished confidence, and delays in recovery. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) reported recently that millions of adults, particularly older people, fall each year in the United States, which is among the leading causes of injury-related hospital visits. This results in longer hospital stays, more expensive treatments, additional work, shorter staff working hours, and fatigue. Previously, the reduced focus on prevention was due to greater reliance on manual monitoring, staff pressures, lack of consistency in risk assessment, and poor communication between teams. Here, the focus was on reactive rather than preventive planning.

presented by

Most healthcare providers still work on the back end by responding to falls, instead of actively preventing them with processes. This approach is reactive and fails to account for systematic, preventive measures. Falls are not just individual incidents. They are manifestations of operational gaps across the healthcare sector that require coordinated action to effect change, including policy, training, and patient-centered mobility planning.

Consistency in risk assessment is an important aspect of a good prevention strategy. The ongoing risk of falling is assessed at admission and regularly throughout care. It also ensures that the care team can adapt quickly to changing circumstances by continuously assessing patient conditions. Furthermore, ongoing staff training and awareness are essential to developing a safer, more streamlined care environment, and safer facilities minimize mobility risks.

Patient-centered mobility support is another key area: every patient will have varying mobility needs that require a patient-centered plan. Technologies like electric patient lifts are employed to assist with transfers and reduce caregiver strain in many facilities, enhancing patient and staff safety. Clear protocols, training, and strong interdepartmental communication are essential for prevention, and technology plays a supporting role in identifying risks early in the care process.

Last but not least, leadership and organizational culture are particularly important to an institution’s integration of prevention into daily business, rather than a compliance audit. With excellent cooperation across the healthcare team, mobility plans and safety protocols are followed consistently. Furthermore, the use of state-of-the-art patient transfer equipment facilitates safer handling practices and emphasizes a proactive culture of patient safety to reduce falls in the unit.

presented by

Patient falls should not be viewed as inevitable events in healthcare settings. In a lot of cases, they are preventable events associated with widespread operational and safety problems. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), falls are a major global issue of public health that leads to a huge number of fatalities and disabilities relative to injuries across the globe.

Extensive planning and team support can help healthcare organizations reduce the risk of falls in hospitals. This will improve patient safety, reduce the burden on operations in inpatient treatment settings, and deliver quality care at all levels of treatment and recovery.

Overall, the key to the patient fall issue is a shift toward a proactive, system-wide prevention paradigm. It assists healthcare organizations in achieving high levels of risk reduction and improved outcomes across all levels of patient care.

Photo: Toa55, Getty Images

David Lykins is the VP of E-Commerce at Med Mart, where he leads digital strategy, marketing, and customer experience. With over a decade in the durable medical equipment industry, he’s passionate about helping families and caregivers find reliable solutions that make everyday life safer and easier.

This post appears through the MedCity Influencers program. Anyone can publish their perspective on business and innovation in healthcare on MedCity News through MedCity Influencers. Click here to find out how.