Falls and Dementia
November is Fall Prevention month. Alzheimer Society of York Region provides support to help you learn about how falls happen and to create safer environments to reduce risk and prevent slips and falls.

Falls are the leading cause of injury-related hospitalizations among Canadian older adults. 20-30% of older adults fall each year.
Older persons, living with dementia or other cognitive impairment have a higher (2-3 times higher) risk of falling & sustaining a fall injury than older persons without cognitive impairment.
Older persons living with dementia may also have poor balance, gait, vision & visual perception problems that increase the risk of falls in the community. Add in potential dehydration & nutritional deficiencies, medications that affect cognitive functioning, & memory explain the reason why the risk of falls is high with persons living with dementia or other cognitive impairment.
We can help. Click here for helpful ways to reduce the risk and prevent falls.
We also provide fall prevention support through;
- Home safety & risk check list.
- Falls assessment.
- Caregiver education.
- Help connecting with an occupational therapist.
- Help getting the right kind of assistive devices.
- Help connecting to falls prevention programs.
Contact us to find out more by emailing [email protected] or calling 1-888-414-5550