How should we manage fear of falling in older adults living in the community?

@article{Parry2013HowSW,
  title={How should we manage fear of falling in older adults living in the community?},
  author={Steve Wayne Parry and Tracy L. Finch and Vincent Deary},
  journal={BMJ : British Medical Journal},
  year={2013},
  volume={346}
}
Many older people have a variety of adverse psychosocial difficulties related to falling, including fear, anxiety, loss of confidence, and impaired perception of ability to walk safely without falling.1 2 The umbrella term for these problems is “fear of falling,” and this is found in around half of community dwelling older people who fall and in up to half of those who have never fallen.1 2 Consequences include avoidance of activity, social isolation, and increasing frailty and risk of further… 
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TLDR
The FES-I is an appropriate tool to assess fear or concerns with respect to falls in the general elderly population, and more appropriately represents concern of falling than has previously been found.
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TLDR
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Does the falls efficacy scale international version measure fear of falling: a reassessment of internal validity using a factor analytic approach
TLDR
The FES-I is an appropriate tool to assess fear or concerns with respect to falls in the general elderly population, and more appropriately represents concern of falling than has previously been found.
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TLDR
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TLDR
Evaluated cognitive and behavioural interventions for improving falls-related psychological concerns showed beneficial effects on fear of falling outcomes immediately after treatment and over the longer term, but the clinical significance of these effects onFear of falling and falls efficacy was unclear.
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References

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TLDR
Exercise interventions were associated with a small to moderate reduction in fear of falling immediately post intervention and risk ratios for dichotomous outcomes and incidence rate ratios (IRR) for rate outcomes.
Reducing the fear of falling among community-dwelling elderly adults through cognitive-behavioural strategies and intense Tai Chi exercise: a randomized controlled trial.
TLDR
The results of this trial suggest that the cognitive-behavioural intervention with Tai Chi exercise helped community-dwelling elderly adults to enhance their mobility, to manage their fear of falling and to increase their quality of life.
Fear of falling: measurement strategy, prevalence, risk factors and consequences among older persons.
TLDR
There is great variation in the reported prevalence of FOF in older people and that there are multiple associated factors, which may be useful in developing multidimensional strategies to decrease FOF and improve quality of life.
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TLDR
This program of multifactorial fall prevention may have an effect on the physical function item of health-related quality of life in favor of the intervention group, but none on other measures of health of life, daily function, fear of falling or psychological well-being.
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TLDR
The study is the first randomised control trial using the Nintendo Wii as a rehabilitation modality investigating a change in fall efficacy and self-reported falls and the cost-effectiveness of the programme is analyzed.
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TLDR
A two-group randomised controlled trial has been developed to evaluate the in-home multicomponent cognitive behavioural programme to manage concerns about falls and associated activity avoidance in frail older people living in the community.
Feasibility of a cognitive behavioural group intervention to reduce fear of falling and associated avoidance of activity in community-living older people: a process evaluation
TLDR
Results of this study show that the current cognitive behavioural group intervention to reduce fear of falling and associated avoidance of activity among older persons is feasible for both participants and facilitators and fits in well with regular care.
Interventions to Reduce Fear of Falling in Community‐Living Older People: A Systematic Review
The objective was to assess which interventions effectively reduce fear of falling in community‐living older people. An extensive search for relevant literature comprised a database search of PubMed,
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