AI Article Synopsis

  • Falls prevention and management for older adults is essential, focusing on the risks posed by certain medications known as fall-risk-increasing drugs (FRIDs).
  • The recent World Guidelines recommend assessing fall history, utilizing structured tools for medication reviews, and incorporating appropriate deprescribing of FRIDs in multifactorial prevention strategies.
  • The paper highlights the importance of personalized assessments through comprehensive geriatric evaluations and stresses the need to improve the execution of medication reviews and deprescribing practices in clinical settings.

Article Abstract

Falls prevention and management in older adults is a critical global challenge. One of the key risk factors for falls is the use of certain medications. Therefore, to prevent medication-related falls, the following is recommended in the recent World Guidelines for Falls Prevention and Management: (1) assess for fall history and the risk of falls before prescribing potential fall-risk-increasing drugs (FRIDs), (2) use a validated, structured screening and assessment tool to identify FRIDs when performing a medication review, (3) include medication review and appropriate deprescribing of FRIDs as a part of the multifactorial falls prevention intervention, and (4) in long-term care residents, if multifactorial intervention cannot be conducted due to limited resources, the falls prevention strategy should still always include deprescribing of FRIDs.In the present statement paper, the working group on medication-related falls of the World Guidelines for Falls Prevention and Management, in collaboration with the European Geriatric Medicine Society (EuGMS) Task and Finish group on FRIDs, outlines its position on how to implement and execute these recommendations in clinical practice.Preferably, the medication review should be conducted as part of a comprehensive geriatric assessment to produce a personalized and patient-centered assessment. Furthermore, the major pitfall of the published intervention studies so far is the suboptimal implementation of medication review and deprescribing. For the future, it is important to focus on gaining which elements determine successful implementation and apply the concepts of implementation science to decrease the gap between research and practice.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10447263PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s41999-023-00824-8DOI Listing

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