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 October 2025 | Issue 10

Welcome to the October 2025 issue of our newsletter

IN THIS ISSUE

  • 2026 Annual Forum Registration Available
  • 2025 Mid-North Coast LHD Rural Forum and Exercise Workshop Registration Available
  • Mini-Review: Getting Down to Get Up – How Older People Can Improve their Ability to Get Up from a Fall
  • Research Highlights

  • Stepping On Updates
  • Call for Participants - Study on Engaging communities to prevent falls
  • Upcoming Events

2026 Annual Forum

NSW Fall Prevention and Healthy Ageing Network

Annual Forum

Friday May 1st 2026

Wesley Conference Centre, Sydney

 

Each year, the NSW Fall Prevention & Healthy Ageing Network Annual Forum provides a unique opportunity for health professionals and the community to come together and learn the latest on fall prevention and healthy ageing. Listen to experts in their field provide an overview of the latest research, advocacy, quality improvement and fall prevention initiatives in residential aged care, hospital, and community settings.

 

This forum also provides a fabulous opportunity to network, exchanges ideas and learn from each other.

 

Details on abstract submission and rural travel grants to come.

 

Revisit past Annual Forums here.

2025 Mid-North Coast LHD Rural Forum

Saturday 29 November 2025

Location: Slim Dusty Centre, Kempsey

 

Mark your calendars for the Mid-North Coast LHD Rural Forum. The aim of our rural forums is to inspire local healthcare staff to provide high-quality, evidence-based care with a focus on strategies to reduce risk & harm from falls. The program will include:

  • Presentations from keynote speakers
  • Fall Prevention initiative updates from the Mid-North Coast LHD
  • Clinical Excellence Commission (CEC) Older Persons’ Patient Safety Program
  • Consumer perspectives

More information to come.

2025 Mid-North Coast LHD Exercise to Prevent Falls in Older People Workshop

Friday 28 November 2025

Location: Slim Dusty Centre, Kempsey

 

Mark your calendars for the Mid-North Coast LHD Rural Forum. The aim of our rural forums is to inspire local healthcare staff to provide high-quality, evidence-based care with a focus on strategies to reduce risk & harm from falls. The program will include:

  • Presentations from keynote speakers
  • Fall Prevention initiative updates from the Mid-North Coast LHD
  • Clinical Excellence Commission (CEC) Older Persons’ Patient Safety Program
  • Consumer perspectives

More information to come.

NEW Mini-Review: Getting Down to Get Up – How Older People Can Improve their Ability to Get Up from a Fall

The NSW Falls Prevention and Healthy Ageing Network team has composed several short reviews on specific topics. The latest review looks at how older people can safely get up from the floor after a fall. The following points are discussed:

  • Falls are common, and many older people require assistance to get up from the floor or ground after a fall.
  • Inability to get up after a fall is associated with adverse health outcomes, including hospitalisation and admission to residential aged care.
  • People who cannot get up often have health conditions (e.g. arthritis, depression, cognitive impairment) and physical impairments (e.g. weakness, poor balance, and gait disturbances).
  • Training using the backwards chaining approach (staged practice of lowering to the floor) may improve the ability to get up without inducing anxiety.
  • Resistance and balance training may build the physical capacity needed to rise from the floor after a fall

Research Highlights

Synergistic effects of exercise, cognitive training and vitamin D on gait performance and falls in mild cognitive impairment-secondary outcomes from the SYNERGIC trial

Pieruccini-Faria F, Son S, Zou G, Almeida QJ, Middleton LE, Bray NW, Lussier M, Shoemaker JK, Speechley M, Liu-Ambrose T, Burhan AM, Camicioli R, Li KZH, Fraser S, Berryman N, Bherer L, Montero-Odasso M. Age Ageing. 2025 Aug 29;54(9):afaf242.

DOI: 10.1093/ageing/afaf242

 

Abstract

Background: Older adults with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) have a higher risk of gait impairments and falls; yet, the effects of multimodal interventions, including combinations of exercises with cognitive training, on improving their mobility remain unclear.

Objectives: To investigate the synergistic effects of aerobic-resistance exercise combined with cognitive training, with or without vitamin D supplementation, on gait performance and falls risk in older adults with MCI.

Methods: The effect of 20 weeks of aerobic-resistance exercise, cognitive training, and Vitamin D supplementation (10 000 IU 3×/week) on gait and falls in older adults with MCI was evaluated in the SYNERGIC trial, using a fractional factorial design. Assessments were conducted at baseline, 6-month endpoint (after intervention) and 12-month endpoint (follow-up). Eligible participants were between the ages of 65 and 84 years with MCI enrolled from 19 September 2016 to 7 April 2020. Main outcomes of interest for gait performance were gait speed and gait variability changes, whilst for falls were incidental falls and incidental injurious falls.

Results: Amongst 161 participants, the four exercise-based arms improved gait speed (+7.5 cm/s, P < .001) and reduced falls (incidence rate ratios (IRR) = 0.65, 95% confidence interval (CI): 0.32-1.42, P = .25) and injurious falls (IRR = 0.38, 95% CI: 0.15-1.05, P = .05) at 6-month endpoint. Falls reduction reached statistical significance (IRR = 0.28, 95% CI: 0.13-0.64, P = .002) at 12-month endpoint. Exercises combined with cognitive training showed the greatest gains in gait speed at 6-month endpoint (P < .001) and in reducing falls at 12-month endpoint (IRR = 0.24, 95% CI: 0.05-0.77, P = .02) compared to the control. Vitamin D did not enhance outcomes and increased gait variability, a marker of instability.

Conclusion: Aerobic-resistance exercise combined with sequential computerised cognitive training improved gait performance at 6 months and decreased the risk of falls and injuries at 12 months in older adults with MCI. The addition of vitamin D did not produce benefits.

 

Read more here

 

For more fall prevention-related research publications, the NSW Fall Prevention and Healthy Ageing Network collates abstracts each month which can be viewed here.

Stepping On Updates

Fidelity Coaching Sessions

My name is Megan Swann ( www.steppingon.com ) and am one of the authors of this fantastic program. In order for the program to work we try and keep to the core elements and avoid program drift. This can happen over time.

 

We have found that visiting you just once at one of the weeks in the seven group program with the aim to check on fidelity has helped keep the program standardised.

 

Fidelity coaching involves:

  • Observe and meet with both facilitators when giving feedback. Encourage them to contribute and reflect.
  • A good practice is both the facilitators also complete a check list to enable productive discussion that is evidence based and best practice.

More information contact us through the website www.steppingon.com

 

Stepping On Training

Places are available for the next Stepping On training day in Sydney on the 1st of December 2025 (see below for flyer).

 

Visit www.steppingon.com for more information

 

Stepping On facilitators guide for NGOs attached.

Call for Participants - Study on Engaging communities to prevent falls

Researchers at NeuRA are conducting a study titled ‘Engaging communities to prevent falls: A collaborative pre- and post-hospital support initiative’. 

 

The project takes a community-focused approach to reduce falls during and after hospitalisation in older people. In partnership with Ramsay Health Care, we will co-design and evaluate strategies such as hospital-based education, pharmacist-led medication reviews, digital home exercise programs, and Rotary-supported community outreach. Our goal is to create a scalable model that supports safer transitions home, improves recovery and reduces hospital readmissions.

 

Who can participate:
Group 1:
 People 60+ years awaiting surgery or have been recently discharged following planned surgery; 
Group 2: Key staff employed within the Sydney Local Health District, such as managers, health professionals, exercise providers and pharmacists. 

What’s involved: Taking part in an interview or focus group that will take no longer than 60 minutes.

 

To find out more about the study or get involved click here

 

This study has been approved by the St Vincent’s Hospital Human Research Ethics Committee 2025/ETH01111.

 

Study flyer attached.

Upcoming Events

ANZHFR Binational Hip Fest 2025
6 - 7 November 2025, Rydges Hotel, Melbourne Australia

 

11th Biennial Australia & New Zealand Falls Prevention Society Conference

23 - 25 November 2025, Sofitel Sydney Wentworth Hotel, Sydney, Australia

 

Asia-Pacific Society for Physical Activity (ASPA) Annual Conference

26 - 28 November 2025, Newcastle City Hall, Sydney, Australia

 

NSW Fall Prevention and Healthy Ageing Network Annual Forum

1 May 2026, Wesley Conference Centre, Sydney, Australia

 

Positive Ageing Summit

20 - 21 May 2026, Adelaide, Australia

 

3rd World Falls Congress - British Geriatric Society in association with the World Falls Prevention Society and EU Falls Fest

24 - 26 June 2026, Manchester, UK

 

ABOUT US

Our vision is to lead the way in fall prevention and other healthy ageing initiatives by harnessing expert knowledge and being collaborative in all we do.

 

We work closely with researchers, policy makers, health practitioners and community service providers in the development and promotion of healthy ageing services and programs with a focus on preventing falls and fall-related injury.

 

Our purpose is to support practitioners to improve the lives of older Australians through healthy ageing initiatives with a focus on preventing falls and fall-related injuries.

SHARE YOUR NEWS

Do you have any news on Fall Prevention or healthy ageing that you want to share with others on the network, or report on a project that is happening in your area. We also welcome suggestions for articles and information you would like to see in this newsletter. Send your news and suggestions to: fallsnetwork@neura.edu.au

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Contact Us:

Telephone +61 2 9399 1063

Email fallsnetwork@neura.edu.au

 

Our mailing address is:
NSW Fall Prevention Network and Healthy Ageing Network
Neuroscience Research Australia
PO Box 1165
Randwick NSW 2031

 

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