An often-overlooked risk, the science of slips and falls can be life-saving - Action News
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Health

An often-overlooked risk, the science of slips and falls can be life-saving

Falls are one of the leading causes of injury in Canada, costing the health-care system more than $2 billion in 2017. And the often-overlooked risk can also be deadly, especially for seniors. But there's increasing research and intervention aimed at preventing the next fall from happening.

Falls-prevention experts turning to education and intervention to ensure 'every fall is not a disaster'

Erin Harris, 74, uses a cane to get around in Toronto after breaking her ankle in a fall in 2012. She's also taking part in a 12-week falls-prevention course at the Toronto Rehabilitation Institute. (Craig Chivers/CBC)

"All right," instructs the teacher. "Standing nice and tall.Use your chair for support please. With your right leg, we're going to lift it up to the side: one, two, three, four five.And again."

Erin Harris goes through the movements:The 74-year-old standsbehind a chair and slowly stretches her left leg, before repeatingthe movement with the right.

Harris is taking part in a falls-prevention class at the Toronto Rehabilitation Institute, along with about a half-dozen other seniors.Some in the room, like Harris, have experienced a bad falland are here to try toprevent the next one from happening.

To do so, they learn about the benefits of exercise, how to get up from a fall, stair safety, healthy eatingand overcoming the fear of falling. The 12-week program, which was first launched in 2013, is part group education, part exercise sessions.

Harris never thought she'd end up in a class like this. She was fit and active all her life. "I took fourbuses to go to skating lessons, onebus to go to ballet played tennis, rodemy bike, skied from the ageof four."

But a tumble down a flight of stairs later in life,at age67,changed all of that. "I was walking five miles a day foreverand it went down to one street," she said, recalling how much less she was able to walk after the fall.

Erin Harris says she has always lived an active lifestyle. But after her fall, she was walking a lot less. (Craig Chivers/CBC)

According to the Canadian Institute for Health Information (CIHI), unintentional falls were the most common form of injury across the country in 2017, resulting in nearly 1,800 emergency-room visits eachday.In all, falling was responsible for 32 per centof all reported ER visits that year, the agency says, costing the health-care system more than $2 billion.

Seniors are the most vulnerable. In addition to being at a higher risk of falling,they also take a longer time to recover from their injuries.

Falls Intervention Team

In Ontario's Niagara region, the regional emergency medical services (EMS)says it has seen arisein the number of calls related to seniors who've fallen.

In response, officialshave come up with an innovative approach to deal with the issue. Last July, a special mobile unitcalled the Falls Intervention Teamwas created. Pairinga paramedic with an occupational therapist,the team is dispatched exclusively to 911 calls from seniors who have fallen.

"By seeing our patients in the environment of the fall and seeing first-hand the circumstances that provoked the fall, the team can often better understand the root cause," saidKaren Lutz, quality assurance commander withNiagaraEMS.

"Paramedics aren't experts in falls prevention, but occupational therapists often are. By uniting the disciplines, we can do a better job of being more proactive when people fall in order to prevent the next one."

Paramedic Eric Huffman watches as his colleague, occupational therapist Leslie Yole, helps an elderly woman navigate her walker. Yole and Huffman are part of a unique team in Ontario's Niagara region that addresses the increasing incidents of falls with older adults. (Craig Chivers/CBC)

When the falls team isn't responding to emergency calls, it checks in onseniors who'vefallen previouslyso-called "frequent fallers."During a recent visit with onewoman, occupational therapist Leslie Yoleused the opportunity to give the 71-year-old a few pointers on how to get up from a spill safely.

"She's an older person,"saidYole. "She doesn't have a lot of social support. She's quite clear that she wants to stay in her home, but she appreciates that she wants to be safe in her home."

It's still early, but officials in Niagara feel they're already making a difference:they say there have been fewer visits to the emergency rooms.

And while the program doesn'tpromise to prevent the first fall, itsgoal is to make sure there are no further ones.

The science of falls

And beyond the hospital, researchers at Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, B.C., have been studying the science of falls in older adults.

"It's a huge cause of injury and death,"said Stephen Robinovitch,an engineer and lead researcher with the school's Injury Prevention and Mobility Laboratory."That's one of the things that motivates me."

The focus of Robinovitch'swork is on the twomost important injuries related to falls: hip fractures and traumatic brain injury.

"We're trying to prevent the next fall from happening,but maybe more specifically, we're also trying to prevent injuryin the event of a fall," he said.

At Simon Fraser University, researcher Stephen Robinovitch and his team work on understand how and why seniors fall. Part of the research is looking at real-life videos of falls at nursing homes in the Vancouver area. (Leanne Hazon/CBC)

According to Robinovitch, falls are the cause of 90 per centof hip fractures in older adults, and someof the work they're doing is tryingto solve that problem. For example, Robinovitch and his team have tested several kinds of protective padding, comingup with a design for a wearable hip protector for seniorsthat fits into an undergarment.

Seniors in 14nursing homes in the Vancouver area already are wearing the hip protectors, Robinovitch says, and so far, it hasreduced hip fractures by one-third in those facilities.

The researchers are also testing different textures of floor surfaces, with the aim of making themeasier for seniors to navigate. They studyreal-life falls from long-term care facilities in the Vancouver area, providing valuable insight into how and why falls occur in older adults.

SFU researchers rely onfootage from Vancouver's care homes for insight into falls:

Footage of real-life falls

6 years ago
Duration 0:50
Closed-circuit television footage from long-term care homes in the Vancouver area used to study falls by the Technology for Injury Prevention in Seniors program at Simon Fraser University in Burnaby, B.C. (SFU-TIPS Research Lab)

"A combination of real-life falls in those high-risk environments and our studies here in the lab ... allows us to gain insight on why every fall is not a disaster," saidRobinovitch.

Bathroom'one of the most dangerous areas of home'

In 2017, falls in the home accounted for about 115,000 emergency department visits, making itthe most common location for a fall, according to CIHI.

And one of the main culprits is thebathroom, with all of its hard and slippery surfaces:More than 70 per centof falls happen getting in and out of the tub.

"The bathroom is such a high-risk environment," saidAlison Novak, a scientist with theToronto Rehabilitation Institute, who also researchesfall prevention. "It's one of the most dangerous areas of the home."

Making the bathroom safer for seniors is part of Novak's work.

"Because we have declines in our physiological capacity, we have declines in balance control," she explained. "So as you step over a large obstacle, like a bathtubrim, you are placed at a greater risk of fall."

At the Toronto Rehabilitation Institute, researcher Alison Novak is working on making bathrooms fall-proof for seniors. (Craig Chivers/CBC )

Part of her research isfocused on grab bars, asking questions like: Should they be present? Should they be mandatory? If they are mandatory, where should theybe placed?

In a simulated bathroom, Novak and her team are trying to find answers to those questions, while also trying to quantify how many falls could potentially be avoided.

To conduct the research, a 73-year old volunteer is placed in a harnessand then instructed to step in and out of a slipperytub. By inducing a shake in thefloor, which forces the volunteer to slip, Novak can study how quickly he is able to recover by holding on to the bar.

"Bathing disability is a huge issue and it's one of the primary reasons an older adult will have to leave their home. If we really do want to support the idea of aging in place, the bathroom is one of those areas we have to address," said Novak.

As for Erin Harris, it took her several weeks to recover from the broken ankle she experienced after fallingin her Toronto condo building. These days, she still relies on a cane to get around, but is determined not to fall ever again.

The classes she's been takingat Toronto Rehabhave helped her restore her self-confidence, she says.

"It allowed me to focus on my balance, my flexibility, my adaptability to change. And I was very grateful for that."