Specialist Home Rehabilitation

Falls Prevention Physiotherapy & OT at Home

Falls prevention physio at home is one of the most effective ways to reduce fall risk in older adults. Our HCPC-registered physiotherapists and occupational therapists visit your parent at home to assess both their physical ability and the safety of their environment — then create a practical plan to keep them on their feet.

HCPC Registered
DBS Checked
CSP & RCOT

Why Do Older Adults Fall?

Falls rarely happen for a single reason. They're usually the result of several factors combining: weaker legs, poorer balance, medication side effects, low blood pressure on standing, reduced eyesight, and hazards around the home. One in three adults over 65 falls each year, and once someone has fallen, the risk of falling again doubles.

What often gets overlooked is the psychological impact. After a fall — or even a near-miss — many older adults develop a fear of falling that makes them move less. Less movement leads to further weakness and deconditioning, which increases fall risk even more. This is sometimes called the "falls cycle," and breaking it requires addressing both the physical and environmental causes together.

If your parent is "furniture surfing" (holding onto walls and chairs to get around), hesitating on stairs, shuffling their feet, or simply saying they feel unsteady, these are warning signs that a falls risk assessment at home could help — before a serious injury occurs.

How Our Team Helps with Falls Prevention at Home

Our physiotherapists focus on the physical causes of falling, while our occupational therapists focus on environmental and behavioural risks. Together, we address the full picture to reduce fall risk effectively.

Physiotherapy

Targeting muscle weakness, poor balance, unsteady gait, and reduced confidence through evidence-based strength and balance training.

  • Otago Exercise Programme — Clinically proven strength and balance programme shown to reduce falls by up to 35%, progressed as your parent gets stronger.
  • Balance Retraining — Targeted exercises that retrain the body's balance reactions, helping recover from trips and stumbles before they become falls.
  • Gait Re-education — Correcting shuffling habits, improving step height and stride length, and rebuilding a confident, safe walking pattern.
  • Floor Recovery Training — Teaching safe techniques (including "backward chaining") to get up from the floor, dramatically reducing fear and anxiety.
  • Confidence Building — Gradually increasing walking distance and activity levels so your parent trusts their body again, rather than avoiding movement.

Occupational Therapy

Identifying trip hazards, poor lighting, unsafe daily habits, and environmental risks that are easy to miss but critical to address.

  • Home Hazard Audit — Room-by-room check of every trip risk including loose rugs, trailing cables, cluttered walkways, and uneven thresholds.
  • Lighting & Vision Assessment — Identifying danger zones like dim hallways, bathroom paths at night, and poorly lit stairways where simple changes make a big difference.
  • Equipment Recommendations — Advising on grab rails, perching stools, bed levers, and raised toilet seats that reduce fall risk without disrupting your parent's home.
  • Safe Habits Coaching — Retraining daily routines like carrying tea, answering the door, or getting out of bed to remove common causes of falls.
  • Fear of Falling Support — Practical strategies to rebuild confidence and overcome anxiety that follows a fall or near-miss, working at your parent's own pace.

Why Falls Prevention Works Best at Home

You cannot effectively prevent falls in a clinic. Your parent might walk perfectly on a smooth clinic floor and struggle on their own thick carpet. They may manage fine in a well-lit assessment room but trip in their dim hallway every evening.

By visiting your parent at home, we see the real picture. We observe exactly which chair they struggle to stand from, which step causes them trouble, and where the lighting is too dim. Our physiotherapist tests their balance on the surface they actually walk on. Our occupational therapist checks the bathroom they actually use.

This means every recommendation is practical and specific — not theoretical. And because your parent practises exercises in the space they live in, the improvements transfer directly to their daily life.

What to Expect from a Falls Assessment

1

Initial Assessment

Your physiotherapist or OT visits at home (60-90 minutes). The physio assesses balance, leg strength, walking pattern, and coordination. The OT assesses trip hazards, lighting, bathroom safety, and daily habits.

2

Treatment Plan

Based on the assessment, we create a tailored programme combining strength and balance exercises with any recommended home modifications. We explain everything clearly to both your parent and the family.

3

Ongoing Sessions

Follow-up visits are typically weekly or fortnightly. We progress exercises as strength improves and check that environmental changes have been implemented. Most families notice meaningful improvements within 6-8 weeks.

4

Communication

We keep you informed throughout, with updates after every session. If we identify issues outside our scope (such as medication reviews or eyesight concerns), we'll recommend the appropriate next steps.

Falls Prevention Home Visit Pricing

Falls prevention physiotherapy and occupational therapy from £60 per home visit. Your initial assessment (£120, 60-90 minutes) includes a full physical and environmental evaluation, a written report, and your parent's personalised treatment plan. Follow-up sessions start from £60 (30 minutes). No hidden costs.

£120

Initial Assessment

60-90 minutes

£60

30-min Follow-up

30 minutes

£90

45-min Follow-up

45 minutes

See Full Price List

Frequently Asked Questions About Falls Prevention

What is a falls assessment?

A falls assessment is a comprehensive evaluation carried out in your parent’s home by a physiotherapist and/or occupational therapist. The physio assesses physical factors — balance, leg strength, walking pattern, and coordination. The OT assesses environmental factors — trip hazards, lighting, bathroom safety, and daily routines. Together, this gives us the full picture of why falls are happening, or are likely to happen, and what to do about it.

How do I know if my parent is at risk of falling?

Warning signs to watch for include “furniture surfing” (holding onto chairs and walls to walk), hesitation on stairs, shuffling feet, near-misses they brush off, or simply saying they feel unsteady. A change in confidence — going out less, avoiding the stairs, or being reluctant to walk unaided — is also a strong indicator. If any of these sound familiar, a home falls risk assessment can identify the specific causes before an injury occurs.

Can the risk of falling be completely removed?

No intervention can eliminate all risk. However, research shows that targeted physiotherapy — particularly the Otago Exercise Programme — can reduce fall risk by up to 35% in older adults. Combined with home modifications from an occupational therapist, most families see a significant reduction in falls and near-misses, along with improved confidence and independence.

Will my parent need to make expensive changes to their home?

Rarely. We prioritise practical, low-cost solutions first. Safety often improves dramatically just by rearranging furniture, fitting brighter bulbs, securing rugs, or removing clutter. If equipment like grab rails or a perching stool would help, we explain exactly what’s needed and where to get it — but the decision is always yours.

Which areas do you cover?

We provide home visits across Hampshire, Dorset, and Wiltshire. This includes Southampton, Bournemouth, Poole, Salisbury, Ringwood, and the surrounding towns and villages.

Book a Falls Assessment at Home

Don't wait for a serious fall to act. Contact us today to arrange a home falls assessment with one of our HCPC-registered physiotherapists or occupational therapists. We'll assess your parent's physical ability and home safety, then create a practical plan to reduce their risk.