The Morse Fall Scale (MFS) is a validated, rapid, and widely used clinical tool for assessing the risk of falling in adult patients in healthcare settings — including hospitals, rehabilitation facilities, and long-term care. Developed by Janice Morse and colleagues in 1989, the scale was derived from retrospective chart review of fall incidents and prospective validation across diverse healthcare environments. The MFS assesses six independent variables identified as reliable predictors of fall risk: history of falling (whether the patient has fallen within the past 3 months, including during the current hospital stay), secondary diagnosis (presence of any additional medical condition beyond the primary diagnosis), ambulatory aid use (none, bed rest/nurse assistance, crutches/cane/walker, or furniture), IV therapy or IV access (including heparin lock), gait assessment (normal/bed rest/wheelchair, weak, or impaired), and mental status (oriented to own ability or forgets limitations). Each item is scored on a weighted scale reflecting its relative contribution to fall risk based on the derivation studies. The total MFS score ranges from 0 to 125, with risk categories of: no risk (0–24), low risk (25–44), and high risk (≥45). High-risk patients require implementation of the full fall prevention protocol — enhanced supervision, environmental modification, non-slip footwear, bed alarms, call bell within reach, frequent toileting assistance, and physiotherapy assessment of mobility and balance. The Morse Fall Scale is implemented in the majority of hospital electronic health record systems globally and is included in national safety standards including NHS CQUINS and Joint Commission (USA) accreditation requirements.
MFS Total Score = Sum of 6 domain scores; History of falling: no=0, yes=25; Secondary diagnosis: no=0, yes=15; Ambulatory aid: none/bed rest/nurse=0, crutches/cane/walker=15, furniture=30; IV/heparin lock: no=0, yes=20; Gait: normal/bed rest/wheelchair=0, weak=10, impaired=20; Mental status: oriented=0, forgets limitations=15; Risk: 0–24=No risk, 25–44=Low risk, ≥45=High risk
- 1Assess history of falling: record whether the patient has fallen within the previous 3 months or during the current hospital admission — this is the single highest-weighted item (25 points) reflecting that prior falls are the strongest predictor of future falls.
- 2Assess for secondary diagnosis: any additional medical diagnosis beyond the primary presenting condition scores 15 points — multiple comorbidities increase fall risk through polypharmacy, mobility impairment, and reduced physiological reserve.
- 3Assess ambulatory aid use: no aid/bed rest/nurse assistance = 0 points; use of crutches, cane, or walking frame = 15 points; holding onto furniture for support while ambulating = 30 points (highest score in this domain, reflecting most precarious gait pattern).
- 4Assess IV therapy or IV access: presence of any IV catheter (peripheral or central) or heparin/saline lock = 20 points — IV access tethers patients to equipment, encumbers gait, and creates tripping hazards.
- 5Assess gait: normal gait (smooth, even stride) or bed-resting patient = 0; weak gait (bent posture, shuffling steps, maintains balance) = 10; impaired gait (difficulty rising, unsteady, uses furniture or person for support, shuffling) = 20.
- 6Assess mental status: patient who is oriented and knows their own capacity = 0; patient who overestimates their ability or forgets limitations (e.g., attempts to walk without calling for help) = 15 — the combination of mobility impairment and poor insight into that impairment is extremely high-risk.
- 7Implement risk-level-specific fall prevention interventions: no risk (0–24) — standard precautions; low risk (25–44) — standard fall prevention protocol; high risk (≥45) — enhanced fall prevention protocol including hourly rounding, bed alarm, bathroom assistance, red 'falls risk' wristband and door sign, and physiotherapy referral within 24 hours.
An MFS of 110 places this patient in the very high-risk category; 1:1 nursing observation should be considered if the patient continues to mobilise unsafely.
Multiple compounding risk factors (recent fall, confusion, IV access, impaired gait with walker use, secondary diagnosis) produce a near-maximum MFS score — this patient requires the most intensive fall prevention measures.
A score of 0 indicates minimal environmental risk; however, post-operative anaesthetic effects and pain medication should be monitored and the scale repeated after surgery.
This patient has none of the identified fall risk factors pre-operatively; the MFS should be repeated post-operatively when factors such as IV access, medication effects, and pain-related gait impairment may increase the score.
MFS should be reassessed after any change in clinical status — delirium is one of the strongest fall risk factors in hospitalised patients.
Delirium transforms a low-risk patient into high-risk rapidly; the mental status item (15 points) in combination with pre-existing IV access (20 points) and weak gait (10 points) pushes the score well above the 45-point high-risk threshold.
Furniture-holding gait is the highest ambulatory aid score (30 points) because it indicates an insecure, uncontrolled gait pattern that maximises fall risk on unfamiliar ward terrain.
The furniture-holding gait category captures the most precarious ambulatory patients — those who are mobile but have lost the balance and strength for safe independent ambulation.
Hospital ward nurses use the MFS to assess and triage fall risk at admission and daily, implementing risk-level-appropriate interventions documented in the patient's care plan.
Electronic health record systems auto-populate MFS scores from nursing assessment data and generate risk alerts and care plan templates for high-risk patients.
Hospital quality and safety teams monitor MFS assessment rates and fall incidence as key performance indicators for hospital accreditation (Joint Commission, CQC).
Physiotherapists receive automatic referrals from the EHR when a patient's MFS score ≥45, enabling timely mobility assessment and rehabilitation planning.
Risk managers and patient safety officers use MFS data from fall incident reports to identify patterns in high-risk populations and implement targeted environment or protocol improvements.
Post-operative fall risk
Post-operative patients have an acutely elevated fall risk due to: residual anaesthetic effects (sedation, delirium, ataxia); opioid analgesia (sedation, orthostatic hypotension); pain limiting mobility; IV access; and functional deterioration from surgery itself. The MFS should be reassessed in the immediate post-operative period and enhanced precautions implemented even if pre-operative MFS was low. The first post-operative mobilisation should always be supervised.
Delirium and fall risk
Delirium is one of the most powerful fall risk factors in hospitalised patients — both hypoactive delirium (confused, sedated, misjudges surroundings) and hyperactive delirium (agitated, impulsive, attempts to get out of bed without recognition of risk) substantially increase fall rates. Systematic delirium prevention (orientation, cognitive stimulation, adequate hydration, sleep hygiene, early mobilisation — the HELP programme) reduces delirium incidence and consequently reduces falls.
Parkinson's disease and fall risk
Patients with Parkinson's disease have one of the highest fall rates among neurological conditions — 60–70% fall at least once per year. Contributing factors include postural instability, festinating gait, freezing of gait, orthostatic hypotension from dopaminergic medications, and cognitive impairment. Standard fall prevention measures are necessary but often insufficient; specialist Parkinson's physiotherapy, dopaminergic medication optimisation, and fall-specific rehabilitation are required.
Visual impairment and fall risk
Visual impairment — including cataracts, glaucoma, and age-related macular degeneration — significantly increases fall risk through impaired depth perception and obstacle detection. Assessment of vision, ensuring glasses prescription is current, ensuring adequate ward lighting, and marking obstacles (bed rails, threshold edges) are important environmental adaptations. Ophthalmology referral and expedited cataract surgery in eligible patients can substantially reduce fall risk.
| MFS Domain | Score Options |
|---|---|
| History of falling | No = 0; Yes (within 3 months or current admission) = 25 |
| Secondary diagnosis | No = 0; Yes = 15 |
| Ambulatory aid | None/bed rest/nurse assist = 0; Crutches/cane/walking frame = 15; Furniture = 30 |
| IV therapy/heparin lock | No = 0; Yes = 20 |
| Gait | Normal/bed rest/wheelchair = 0; Weak = 10; Impaired = 20 |
| Mental status | Knows own ability (oriented) = 0; Overestimates ability/forgets limitations = 15 |
| Total score | 0–24 = No risk; 25–44 = Low risk; ≥45 = High risk |
How often should the Morse Fall Scale be reassessed?
The MFS should be completed on admission, at least daily during the hospital stay, and after any significant clinical change (new medication, acute neurological event, delirium, post-procedure, post-fall). Many hospital policies require reassessment every 24 hours and immediately after any fall incident. Electronic health records with automated daily prompts improve reassessment compliance.
What is the sensitivity and specificity of the Morse Fall Scale?
In the original validation study, the MFS had sensitivity of 78–83% and specificity of 83% for predicting falls using a threshold of 45. Subsequent validation studies report varying performance depending on the setting and population — hospital sensitivity 80–90% in many studies, with specificity often lower (60–70%) due to the frequency of high-risk classifications. The MFS performs better in adult hospital populations than in residential care settings.
What fall prevention interventions should be implemented for high-risk patients?
High-risk (MFS ≥45) patients should receive: risk identification (red wristband, door sign, bed flag); bed in lowest position with brakes locked; call bell within reach and patient instructed to use it; non-slip footwear; adequate lighting; bed alarm if cognitively impaired; hourly purposeful rounding by nursing staff; assistance with all transfers and ambulation; physiotherapy assessment and exercise programme; medication review (sedatives, antihypertensives, diuretics, psychotropics); and environmental hazard removal.
What is the clinical burden of in-hospital falls?
In-hospital falls are the most commonly reported patient safety incidents in healthcare settings. In the UK, approximately 200,000–300,000 falls occur in NHS hospitals annually. Consequences include: minor (bruising, skin tears), moderate (soft tissue injury, psychological impact), and severe (fracture, head injury, death). Hip fractures from hospital falls carry approximately 25–30% 12-month mortality and generate direct costs of £10,000–£30,000 per incident.
Are there other validated fall risk assessment tools?
Yes. Alternatives to the Morse Fall Scale include: STRATIFY (Royal College of Nursing UK — 5-item tool validated in UK hospital settings); St Thomas's Risk Assessment Tool (STRATIFY); FRAIL tool (frailty-focused); STEADI toolkit (CDC — for primary care); Hendrich II Fall Risk Model (specific to acute care); and disease-specific tools for Parkinson's disease (the Berg Balance Scale). The choice of tool depends on the clinical setting and local guideline adoption.
Does anti-coagulation therapy affect fall risk assessment and management?
Yes. Patients on anticoagulants (warfarin, DOACs, LMWH) who fall have a disproportionately high risk of serious injury from bleeding (intracranial haemorrhage, major haemarthrosis). Fall prevention is especially critical in anticoagulated patients. Some falls risk/benefit discussions include whether the bleeding risk from falls outweighs the thromboembolism prevention benefit of anticoagulation — this decision should involve specialist input and is particularly relevant in frail elderly patients.
What medications most commonly increase fall risk?
Medications associated with increased fall risk: benzodiazepines and Z-drugs (sedation, balance impairment); opioids (sedation, orthostatic hypotension); antihypertensives and diuretics (orthostatic hypotension); antidepressants — particularly TCAs and SSRIs (orthostatic hypotension, sedation); antipsychotics (extrapyramidal effects, sedation); anti-epileptics (ataxia, sedation); alpha-blockers (orthostatic hypotension); polypharmacy in general. Medication review (STOPP/START criteria) is an essential component of multifactorial fall prevention.
Is the Morse Fall Scale validated for community and primary care settings?
The MFS was developed and validated primarily in hospital and rehabilitation settings. For community-dwelling older adults, different tools are preferred: the STEADI algorithm (CDC) for primary care; 4-stage balance test (tandem stance); TUG test (Timed Up and Go — >12 seconds = elevated risk); gait speed (<1.0 m/s = concern; <0.8 m/s = significant risk). The MFS is not typically used in primary care or community settings.
Pro Tip
After completing the MFS, always specifically address the items that scored >0: a patient who holds furniture to walk (30 points) needs a walking frame or physiotherapy assessment today, not 'when available.' Targeted intervention for each contributing risk factor is more effective than generic fall prevention labelling.
Did you know?
Falls have been a recognised hospital safety challenge since Florence Nightingale's era, but systematic risk assessment only began in the 1980s. The Morse Fall Scale (1989) was one of the first tools to apply statistical derivation from actual fall incident data rather than clinical consensus — a methodological innovation that significantly improved predictive validity over earlier checklist approaches.
References
- ›Morse JM — Preventing Patient Falls, 2nd edition (Springer, 2009)
- ›NICE NG147 — Falls in Older People: Assessing risk and prevention (2013, updated 2019)
- ›WHO — Step 1: Assess fall risk using a validated tool
- ›Oliver D et al. — Preventing falls and fall-related injuries in hospitals (BMJ, 2010)
- ›RCP — Report of the National Audit of Inpatient Falls 2023 (Royal College of Physicians)