STEADI Incorporated Into Physical Therapy Curriculum

At a glance

Learn how Mercer University's Physical Therapy Department in Atlanta, Georgia used STEADI to train physical therapy students in fall prevention.

Story

A woman receives care from physical therapists.
Mercer University Physical Therapy students with older adult patients.

David Taylor, PT, DPT, GCS, Clinical Assistant Professor and Director of Clinical Education at Mercer University, learned early in his career about the enormous burdens of falls on his older adult patients. When Dr. Taylor first learned of the STEADI initiative four years ago, he quickly saw how STEADI could be used as a tool for training physical therapy students.

Dr. Taylor, a professor for the Doctor of Physical Therapy (DPT) program, added STEADI to the Geriatrics Considerations in Patient/Client Management course curriculum. In this course, students are required to take CDC's STEADI Older Adult Fall Prevention Online Training for Providers and to apply the STEADI algorithm [1 page] as part of a project with the Shepherd Center, a hospital that specializes in spinal cord and brain injury rehabilitation in Atlanta, Georgia.

For the past three years, Dr. Taylor's students have conducted their project at the Shepherd Center's annual Fall Prevention Awareness Day. Since Dr. Taylor added STEADI to the course curriculum, 114 DPT students have been trained to use STEADI; 76 have completed the STEADI online training module; and many have shared STEADI with the practices they joined as part of their clinical training or post-graduation employment in acute care or outpatient orthopedic practices.

In addition to incorporating STEADI into the DPT curriculum, Dr. Taylor also conducted a service-based learning activity focused on reducing fall risk. With a grant from the Mercer University Health Sciences Center, he convened a group of nursing, public health, physical therapy, pharmacy, and physician assistant students and associated faculty. Groups of student participants discussed fall risk prevention, and conducted community-based STEADI screenings with 27 community volunteers. With representatives from several professional disciplines, each group could perform the three core elements of STEADI: Screen, Assess, and Intervene.

"Falls are a problem for everyone on the patients' healthcare team. STEADI provides healthcare professionals across disciplines a common language, evidence-based tools for identification of fall risk, and mitigation strategies. I hope adoption and implementation of STEADI will promote early identification of fall risk, support participation in mitigation interventions, and reduce the number of falls experienced by older adults."

Dr. David Taylor
Dr. David Taylor, PT, DPT, GCS

As a result of their STEADI training, Dr. Taylor's colleagues and students have shown that STEADI's coordinated approach to fall prevention has utility for physical therapists, who are integral members of the healthcare team.