Certain medications significantly increase fall risk in older adults. Ask your pharmacist or doctor to review your medications using the Beers Criteria.
Many medications that are appropriate and necessary for treating one condition have side effects — dizziness, sedation, orthostatic hypotension, impaired coordination — that directly increase fall risk. This is not a reason to stop taking your medications. It is a reason to have an informed conversation with your doctor and pharmacist about whether there are alternatives, lower doses, or better timing strategies that reduce the risk while maintaining treatment effectiveness.
The key tool for this conversation is the Beers Criteria — a regularly updated list published by the American Geriatrics Society identifying medications that are potentially inappropriate for older adults.
Benzodiazepines (Valium, Xanax, Ativan, Klonopin), non-benzodiazepine sleep aids (Ambien/zolpidem, Lunesta/eszopiclone), and Z-drugs are among the highest-risk medications for falls. They impair balance, reaction time, and coordination — effects that persist into the next morning.
Antihypertensives — including beta-blockers, ACE inhibitors, calcium channel blockers, and diuretics — can cause orthostatic hypotension: a sudden drop in blood pressure when standing up. This causes dizziness and lightheadedness that can lead to a fall in the first few seconds of standing.
Both older antidepressants (tricyclics like amitriptyline) and newer ones (SSRIs like sertraline/Zoloft, fluoxetine/Prozac) are associated with increased fall risk. SSRIs affect sodium balance and impair blood pressure regulation. Tricyclics have additional anticholinergic effects that cause sedation and confusion.
Diphenhydramine (Benadryl, ZzzQuil, Tylenol PM, Advil PM) is one of the most dangerous medications for older adults — yet it's sold over the counter and perceived as safe. It crosses the blood-brain barrier easily, causing sedation, confusion, blurred vision, and urinary retention — all fall risk factors.
Loop diuretics (furosemide/Lasix) and thiazides (hydrochlorothiazide) cause increased urination, which can lead to dehydration, electrolyte imbalances (especially low sodium and potassium), and orthostatic hypotension. Urgency to reach the bathroom quickly — particularly at night — is itself a fall risk.
Insulin and sulfonylureas (glipizide, glyburide, glimepiride) can cause hypoglycemia — dangerously low blood sugar — which produces sudden dizziness, weakness, shakiness, and confusion. A hypoglycemic episode while standing, walking, or navigating stairs can result in a serious fall.
The Beers Criteria is a list of medications that the American Geriatrics Society (AGS) considers potentially inappropriate for adults age 65 and older. It is updated every three years based on the latest evidence. The list includes drugs that should be avoided entirely, drugs that require dose adjustment in older adults, and drugs with significant drug-drug interactions common in this population.
The Beers Criteria is not a prescription for stopping medications. It is a structured framework for a conversation with your doctor about whether the benefits of a medication still outweigh its risks given your current health status, age, and fall risk profile.
Print this list and bring it to your next pharmacy visit. Most pharmacists welcome this conversation and many offer free Medication Therapy Management (MTM) reviews for Medicare patients.
Ask this of all your medications — prescription and over-the-counter. Bring the actual bottles, not just a list.
Medicare Part D plans are required to offer MTM to high-risk beneficiaries. This is a comprehensive review by a pharmacist — completely separate from your doctor visit.
Diphenhydramine is hidden in many branded products: Tylenol PM, Advil PM, ZzzQuil, Unisom SleepTabs, many cold and allergy medications. Ask specifically.
Taking a sedating medication at night rather than morning, or a diuretic in the morning rather than evening, can meaningfully reduce the risk window without changing the medication itself.
When multiple medications are combined, the interaction can produce fall-risk side effects that neither drug causes alone. This requires a full medication list to evaluate properly.
Your pharmacist works alongside your doctor and physical therapist as part of a complete fall prevention care team.