Chart — Patient Safety
Morse Fall Risk Scale
The Morse Fall Scale (MFS) is a validated, widely-used tool for rapidly assessing patient fall risk in acute care settings. It scores six risk factors to stratify patients into no, low, moderate, or high risk — guiding the intensity of fall prevention interventions.
Source: Morse Fall Scale — Janice M. Morse, PhD, RN, FAAN
Educational use only. The MFS is a clinical assessment tool. Apply it in context with clinical judgment and your facility's fall prevention policy. Score thresholds may vary by institution. This material supports nursing education and exam review. It is not medical advice and is not a substitute for clinical judgment, institutional policy, or medical direction. Always follow facility protocols and current provider orders.
Scoring Categories
1. History of Falling
0 or 25 pts| Points | Criterion |
|---|---|
| 0 | No history of falling in the past 3 months (or immediately prior to admission) |
| 25 | History of falling within the past 3 months, or patient fell during the current hospitalization |
2. Secondary Diagnosis
0 or 15 pts| Points | Criterion |
|---|---|
| 0 | Only one medical diagnosis |
| 15 | More than one medical diagnosis (comorbidities) |
3. Ambulatory Aid
0, 15, or 30 pts| Points | Criterion |
|---|---|
| 0 | None / bed rest / nurse assist / wheelchair |
| 15 | Crutches, cane, or walker |
| 30 | Holds onto furniture when ambulating (braces on furniture) |
4. IV Therapy / Heparin Lock
0 or 20 pts| Points | Criterion |
|---|---|
| 0 | No IV access or heparin lock |
| 20 | IV access present or saline/heparin lock — impedes mobility and increases fall risk during ambulation |
5. Gait / Transferring
0, 10, or 20 pts| Points | Criterion | What It Looks Like |
|---|---|---|
| 0 | Normal / Bed rest / Immobile | Steady, smooth gait; or unable to ambulate (bed rest) |
| 10 | Weak | Stooped but can raise head while walking; slightly off-balance; short steps; may shuffle; holds onto objects for minor support |
| 20 | Impaired | Difficulty standing; unable to walk without major support; loss of balance during ambulation; short steps or shuffling with significant difficulty |
6. Mental Status
0 or 15 pts| Points | Criterion |
|---|---|
| 0 | Oriented to own ability — correctly assesses own mobility level and follows safety instructions |
| 15 | Overestimates ability or forgets limitations — impulsive; attempts to get up without calling; confused about functional status |
Total Score Interpretation
| Score Range | Risk Level | Recommended Action |
|---|---|---|
| 0 – 24 | No Risk | Universal fall precautions; standard care |
| 25 – 44 | Low Risk | Standard fall prevention interventions; patient and family education |
| 45 – 54 | Moderate Risk | Implement fall prevention program; bed alarm; assisted ambulation; fall-risk signage |
| ≥ 55 | High Risk | Intensive fall prevention; consider 1:1 sitter; frequent reassessment; multidisciplinary review |
Maximum possible score: 125 points (all high-point responses). Minimum: 0. Reassess whenever the patient's condition or mobility changes and at transfer of care.
Nursing Implications
- Reassess with every condition change — a patient who scores low at admission may score high after a procedure, new medication, or episode of delirium.
- The score guides intervention intensity — it does not replace clinical judgment. A patient with a low score may still warrant additional precautions based on your assessment.
- Mental status (item 6) is highly clinically significant — impulsive patients with impaired insight are at extreme risk regardless of their other scores.
- History of falling (item 1) is the strongest single predictor — weight this heavily in your clinical assessment.
- Document the score in the medical record with the assessment time; communicate it clearly at handoff.
Related Resources
Standards & sources
Fact-checked Jun 21, 2026This page is written to align with Morse Fall Scale (MFS) — Janice M. Morse. It is an educational summary, not a citation of any single document — always verify specific doses, values, and protocols against current guidelines and your facility policy. How we source content →
