Every second of every day, an older adult suffers a fall in the United
States (>30 million older adults fall each year). More than 20% of these
falls cause serious injury (e.g., broken bones, head injury) and result in
800,000 hospitalizations and 30,000 deaths annually. Bhasin and colleagues
recently reported results from a pragmatic, cluster-randomized trial designed to
evaluate the effectiveness of a multifactorial intervention to prevent fall
injuries. The intervention did not result in a significantly lower rate of a
first adjudicated serious fall injury among older adults at increased risk for
fall injuries as compared with enhanced usual care. In this commentary we
briefly review and highlight these recent findings. Additionally, we argue that
the findings should not be discounted just because of the lack of statistical
significance. The approximately 10% reduction compared to enhanced usual care
is, arguably, meaningful at both the individual and public health level,
especially when one considers that the control group had better outcomes than
expected based on prior work. Moreover, we encourage future research as well as
practitioners to give strong consideration to the nuances of the exercise
interventions for reducing falls and fall-related injuries particularly as it
relates to exercise programming specifics, namely intensity and volume, to
enhance neuromuscular function and also to neurorehabilitation approaches to
enhance motor function (e.g., balance, motor planning, and coordination).