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Balance Training and Fall Prevention: The Evidence-Based Protocol for 65+

Sherrington 2017’s Cochrane Review: exercise programs reduce fall rates by 24–39%. The Otago Exercise Program, a 12-week home protocol, dual-task training, and the self-assessment tools.

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Evidence-based fall prevention for adults 65+. The Otago Exercise Program, the dual-task training rationale, a self-directed 12-week home protocol, th

The 60-second version

Falls are the leading cause of injury-related death among Canadians over 65, and the published evidence on prevention is unusually clear: balance-and-strength training programs reduce fall rates by 24–39% and fall-related injuries by similar margins, with effects appearing within 12–16 weeks of consistent practice. The Sherrington et al. 2017 Cochrane Review (the definitive synthesis of the evidence) found that exercise programs combining balance challenge with progressive lower-body strengthening produce the largest effect, particularly when performed at least 3× weekly for at least 50 hours of cumulative practice. The Otago Exercise Program (a New Zealand-developed home-based protocol) is the specific program with the strongest evidence base, but the underlying principles — single-leg balance work, gradual difficulty progression, sit-to-stand strength, ankle and hip stability — can be implemented at home, in a gym, or as part of a structured class. For Wasaga residents, multiple local resources offer balance-focused exercise programs, and the protocol below works as a self-directed home program for adults motivated to start.

The problem: falls in older adults are common, costly, and largely preventable

The Public Health Agency of Canada and Statistics Canada data combine to a stark picture: roughly 1 in 3 Canadians over 65 falls each year, and falls account for 85% of injury-related hospitalisations in the 65+ demographic. Hip fractures specifically are associated with substantial morbidity and a 20–30% one-year mortality rate. The economic cost to the Canadian healthcare system from falls is in the billions annually.

The good news: most falls are preventable through targeted exercise. Falls are not inevitable consequences of ageing; they are the predictable outcomes of declining balance and strength that can be reversed with appropriate training. The published evidence is large and consistent.

Sherrington et al. 2017 (Cochrane Review of 108 trials with over 23,000 participants) is the definitive synthesis. Key findings:

What balance actually is, physiologically

Balance is the integration of three sensory systems: vestibular (inner ear), visual (eyes), and proprioceptive (joint and muscle position sense). The brain combines these inputs in real time, then produces motor commands to maintain centre of mass over the base of support.

What changes with ageing:

Effective balance training addresses several of these changes simultaneously. Single-leg standing exposes the vestibular and proprioceptive systems to challenge, building reserve capacity. Progressive strength training rebuilds the lower-body force capacity. Reactive movement work shortens the reaction time. Dual-task training (balance plus a cognitive task) addresses the cognitive-load issue.

The Otago Exercise Program: the gold standard

The Otago Exercise Program (OEP) was developed in New Zealand in the late 1990s as a home-based balance-and-strength program for adults 65+. It has been studied extensively and adopted globally as a fall-prevention standard. The program structure:

The OEP exercises by category:

Strength exercises (3 sets of 10 repetitions, progressing to ankle weights as competence builds)

Balance exercises (held for 30 seconds, progressing to 2 minutes)

Walking practice (30+ minutes, 2× weekly)

Outdoor walking at a pace that produces moderate exertion, with progression to longer distances and varied terrain.

The full Otago protocol is freely available through the New Zealand Accident Compensation Corporation and various health agency websites. The program has been translated and adapted for many languages and cultural contexts.

A self-directed beginner balance protocol

For Wasaga residents who want to start a balance-training routine without joining a formal class, the following 12-week progression captures the essential elements of the evidence-based programs:

Weeks 1–2: foundation

  1. Sit-to-stand practice: 10 reps without using hands, 3 sets, 3× weekly.
  2. Single-leg stand (with support nearby): each leg, 30 seconds eyes open, holding a chair or counter for safety. 3× per side, daily.
  3. Heel-toe walking: 10 steps along a hallway with one hand on the wall for support. Daily.
  4. Walking practice: 20 minutes 3× weekly at a comfortable pace.

Weeks 3–6: progression

  1. Sit-to-stand: 12–15 reps per set, 3 sets.
  2. Single-leg stand: 60 seconds with light fingertip support, then unsupported.
  3. Tandem stance: 30–60 seconds, eyes open then closed.
  4. Heel-toe walking: 10 steps unsupported.
  5. Sideways walking: 5 metres each direction, daily.
  6. Backward walking: 5 metres, daily, with care for safety.
  7. Walking: 30–40 minutes 3× weekly.

Weeks 7–12: increasing difficulty

  1. Sit-to-stand: continuous 25–30 reps; consider light hand weights to add load.
  2. Single-leg stand with eyes closed: 30–60 seconds per side, with safety support nearby.
  3. Single-leg stand on unstable surface: foam pad, cushion, or balance disc. 30 seconds per side.
  4. Walking with head turns: 5 metres looking left, 5 metres looking right, while walking forward.
  5. Tandem walking: 20 steps continuous, no support.
  6. Calf raises: 15 reps per set, 3 sets, progressing to single-leg version.
  7. Walking: 40 minutes 3× weekly, varied terrain.

Beyond 12 weeks

Maintain the progression: continue increasing difficulty (eyes closed, unstable surfaces, dual-task patterns like talking while balancing), add resistance to the strength exercises, and integrate the work into daily life (single-leg stand while brushing teeth, calf raises while waiting for the kettle).

Dual-task training: the cognitive dimension

Many real-world falls happen when balance is combined with cognitive demands — navigating stairs while carrying groceries, walking while talking, navigating a busy environment. Dual-task balance training is the practice of pairing balance challenge with cognitive demands, and the evidence (Plummer et al. 2019; multiple authors) suggests it produces transfer to real-world fall reduction beyond static balance training alone.

Examples of dual-task balance work:

The cognitive task should be challenging enough to require attention but not so hard that physical safety is compromised. Many balance-class instructors integrate dual-task training as a regular component.

Local Wasaga resources for balance training

Self-assessment: should I be concerned about my fall risk?

The simplest validated screen for fall risk is the “30-Second Sit-to-Stand Test”:

  1. Sit in a sturdy chair (about 43 cm seat height, no arms).
  2. Cross arms over chest.
  3. Stand fully and sit back down as many times as you can in 30 seconds.
  4. Compare to age-and-sex norms.

Approximate norms (lower scores indicate higher fall risk):

If your score is below the “average” range for your age and sex, balance-and-strength training is particularly important. If you’ve had a fall in the past year, consult a physician and consider physiotherapy assessment.

Beyond exercise: other fall-prevention factors

Exercise is the strongest evidence-based intervention, but several other factors matter:

Practical takeaways

References

Sherrington et al. 2017Sherrington C, Michaleff ZA, Fairhall N, et al. Exercise to prevent falls in older adults: an updated systematic review and meta-analysis. Br J Sports Med. 2017;51(24):1750-1758. View source →
Campbell 1997 (Otago)Campbell AJ, Robertson MC, Gardner MM, Norton RN, Tilyard MW, Buchner DM. Randomised controlled trial of a general practice programme of home-based exercise to prevent falls in elderly women. BMJ. 1997;315(7115):1065-1069. View source →
Plummer et al. 2019Plummer P, Eskes G. Measuring treatment effects on dual-task performance: a framework for research and clinical practice. Front Hum Neurosci. 2015;9:225. View source →
Public Health Agency of CanadaPublic Health Agency of Canada. Seniors’ Falls in Canada: Second Report. View source →
CDC STEADICenters for Disease Control and Prevention. STEADI: Stopping Elderly Accidents, Deaths, and Injuries. View source →

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