After a fall
Look beyond the event itself to what changed before and after it.
- Immediate follow-up
- Near-falls and warning signs
- Pain or weakness changes
- When urgent evaluation matters
Section hub
A fall is rarely just one event. It is often a sign that balance, strength, medications, vision, footwear, or the home setup have changed enough that daily movement is no longer as safe as it was.
Caregivers noticing recent falls, near-falls, slower walking, fear of stairs, new weakness after illness, or more trouble getting in and out of bed, chairs, and bathrooms.
Look beyond the event itself to what changed before and after it.
Walking safety depends on strength, confidence, device fit, and environment.
Use these topic prompts to narrow the family conversation and choose the next practical step.
Use this topic to focus your next review inside Falls & Mobility.
Use this topic to focus your next review inside Falls & Mobility.
Use this topic to focus your next review inside Falls & Mobility.
Use this topic to focus your next review inside Falls & Mobility.
Use this topic to focus your next review inside Falls & Mobility.
One fall can be enough when it is paired with new weakness, confusion, trouble standing, repeated near-falls, or a home setup that no longer supports safe transfers and walking.
No. Mobility also includes standing from a chair, turning safely, getting into the bathroom, using stairs, and moving at night without rushing or losing balance.
Use the scenario hub if this section does not match what is happening at home, or open the checklist hub for a practical review.