What to Do When a Parent Falls at Home

Your parent fell. Maybe you were there. Maybe you found them on the floor. Maybe they called you afterward and said it was nothing.

It is not nothing.

A fall in an older adult is always a signal — and sometimes an emergency. Here is exactly what to do.

Please note: If your parent fell and lost consciousness, hit their head, cannot get up, or seems confused or in significant pain — call 911 immediately. Do not try to move them yourself.

In the Moment — What to Do Right Now

Do not rush to pull them up. Moving someone too quickly after a fall can cause more injury, especially if they have hit their head or hurt their back or hip.

Speak to them calmly. Ask: Are you in pain? Can you move your arms and legs? Did you hit your head?

Call 911 if there is any doubt. Signs that require emergency care: loss of consciousness (even briefly), confusion or disorientation, inability to move a limb, significant pain especially in the hip or back, a cut that won’t stop bleeding, or they hit their head.

If they seem okay and want to get up, help them carefully. Roll them to their side, help them to a kneeling position, then have them use a sturdy chair to push themselves up slowly. Never pull from the arms.

Watch them for the next 24 hours. Even if nothing seems wrong, falls can cause internal injuries that are not immediately obvious. Headaches, confusion, increasing pain, or unusual sleepiness after a fall warrant a call to the doctor.

After the Fall — What Needs to Happen

Tell the doctor, even if your parent says they are fine. Falls are a significant medical event. The doctor needs to know. There may be a medical reason for the fall — blood pressure dropping, a medication side effect, an inner ear problem, or early cognitive changes. All of these are treatable.

Ask specifically: why did they fall? A fall is a symptom, not a random event. The cause matters because it points to the prevention.

Get a medication review. Many falls in older adults are caused or worsened by medications — blood pressure drugs, sleep aids, anxiety medications, and even some allergy medications can cause dizziness. A pharmacist or doctor can review the full medication list.

Request a physical therapy evaluation. A physical therapist can assess balance and strength, identify fall risks, and prescribe targeted exercises. This is covered by Medicare when ordered by a doctor.

Preventing the Next Fall

Walk through the home with fresh eyes. The most common fall hazards: throw rugs, poor lighting, clutter in hallways, no grab bars in the bathroom, a slippery shower floor, and stairs without railings.

Install grab bars in the bathroom. This is the single most impactful home modification. In the shower, next to the toilet, and at the entry to the tub. This is not expensive and it works.

Improve lighting. Night lights from the bedroom to the bathroom. A lamp within reach of the bed. Good overhead lighting in the kitchen and on stairs.

Check footwear. Your parent should never be walking in socks without grip soles or in loose slippers. Well-fitting shoes with non-slip soles make a real difference.

Consider a medical alert device. If your parent lives alone, a fall detection device means help is available even if they cannot reach a phone.

The Conversation You Need to Have

A fall — especially a second fall — is a signal that the current living situation may need to change. This does not mean a nursing home. It might mean more home care, a bathroom renovation, moving to a more accessible space, or increased oversight.

Have this conversation while your parent is stable, not in the middle of a crisis. It goes much better that way.

Questions to Ask the Doctor

“What caused the fall — is there a medical reason we should investigate?” “Can we do a full medication review to check for fall-risk drugs?” “Would physical therapy help my parent’s balance and strength?” “Should we see a specialist — a neurologist, cardiologist, or ear specialist — to rule out underlying causes?” “What fall prevention equipment do you recommend for our home?”

Helpful Resources

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    When a Parent Refuses Help: What Caregivers Can Do

    You can see that they need help. They cannot. Or they can see it and they are scared. Or they are angry that it has come to this. Or they simply do not want to lose the independence that has defined them for seventy years.

    When a parent refuses help, it is one of the most frustrating experiences in caregiving. You know the risk. You can see what is coming. And you feel completely powerless.

    You are not powerless. But the approach matters enormously.

    Understand Why They Are Refusing

    Before anything else, try to understand what is driving the refusal. The reason matters, because different reasons need different responses.

    Fear of losing independence. This is the most common reason. Accepting help feels like admitting they can no longer manage — and that is terrifying for someone who has been capable and self-sufficient their whole life.

    Denial. Some people genuinely do not see how much their abilities have declined. Memory problems can contribute to this — they may not remember the fall, the forgotten stove, the missed medication.

    Pride. Especially in older generations, needing help can feel shameful. They do not want to be a burden. They do not want anyone to see them as diminished.

    Fear of the helper. Sometimes the refusal is specifically about a stranger coming into the home. They may be more open to help from family, or from someone they know.

    A previous bad experience. If a past caregiver was not a good fit, the memory may be coloring their willingness now.

    What Actually Works

    Don’t make it about what they can’t do. Frame help as something that benefits you, not something they need because they’re failing. “Mom, I’d feel so much better knowing someone was there to help you. It would take a lot of worry off me.” This is honest and it removes the shame.

    Start small. Don’t propose a full care plan. Start with one specific thing. “Would it be okay if someone came twice a week just to help with the heavy cleaning?” A small yes can become a bigger yes over time.

    Let the doctor say it. Parents who refuse to listen to their children will often listen to a doctor. Ask the physician to recommend the help directly — and to explain why it matters medically.

    Give them control where you can. Let them choose the helper, choose the schedule, choose what tasks are helped with. Refusal often comes from feeling controlled. Giving choices reduces that feeling.

    Bring in a neutral third party. Sometimes a geriatric care manager, social worker, or trusted family friend can have conversations that a child cannot. The family dynamic can make it hard for a parent to hear you clearly.

    Try a trial. “Let’s just try it for a month and see how it goes.” A temporary commitment feels less threatening than a permanent change.

    Connect help to something they care about. If staying in their own home matters most to them, make that the reason. “The doctor said that if we don’t get some help in place, it might be harder to keep you home safely.” That is honest, and it speaks to what they actually want.

    When Safety Is the Issue

    If your parent is refusing help in a way that creates real safety risk — they are falling, not eating, forgetting medications, wandering — you may need to escalate.

    Talk to their doctor about your concerns. The doctor can order an assessment, recommend specific care, and sometimes reach your parent in a way that family cannot.

    If cognitive decline is affecting their ability to make safe decisions for themselves, it may be time to talk to an elder law attorney about guardianship or other legal protections. This is a last resort, but when safety is genuinely at risk, it may be necessary.

    Take Care of Yourself Through This

    Watching someone you love refuse help that they clearly need is exhausting and heartbreaking. It is okay to feel angry, sad, and helpless. Find a caregiver support group — talking to others who understand exactly what you are going through makes a real difference.

    You cannot force someone who is mentally competent to accept care. But you can keep showing up, keep trying different approaches, and keep the relationship intact while you do.

    Questions to Ask

    “Do I understand why my parent is refusing — specifically?” “Have I asked the doctor to recommend help directly?” “Have I tried starting with something small and non-threatening?” “Is there a geriatric care manager or social worker who could help facilitate this?” “Is my parent’s refusal a safety issue that requires a different level of intervention?”

    Helpful Resources

  • Long-Distance Caregiving

    You live three hours away. Or across the country. You get a call that your parent fell, or missed a doctor’s appointment, or a neighbor is worried. And you feel completely helpless.

    Long-distance caregiving is one of the most stressful situations a family can face. You cannot be there every day. You cannot see how they are really doing. And every visit feels like a race to assess everything before you have to leave again.

    You are not alone in this — and there are real strategies that help.

    Please note: This page provides general information for family caregivers. Always involve your parent’s medical team in any care decisions.

    What Makes Long-Distance Caregiving So Hard

    Distance means you are working with incomplete information. You hear what your parent tells you — which may not be the full picture. You see what they show you on a video call — which is often their best day. The decline that is visible in person is invisible from a distance.

    You are also managing guilt. Every time something goes wrong, there is a voice that says you should have been there.

    Neither of those things means you are failing. Long-distance caregiving requires a different set of tools than in-person caregiving. Here is what actually works.

    Build Your Local Team

    This is the single most important thing you can do. You need eyes and hands on the ground near your parent.

    Primary care doctor. Get on a first-name basis with their doctor’s office. Ask to be listed as an emergency contact and authorized to receive medical information. Call the office directly — do not rely solely on your parent to relay information.

    A neighbor or friend. One trusted person near your parent who will call you if something seems wrong. This person is invaluable. Nurture that relationship.

    A geriatric care manager. A professional who assesses your parent’s needs, coordinates care, and acts as your local eyes. They visit regularly, report back to you, and handle problems on the ground. Search for one at aginglifecare.org. This may be the best money you spend.

    A home care agency. Even a few hours of help per week gives someone trained eyes in the home and provides help with tasks your parent is struggling with.

    Stay Informed From a Distance

    Ask for direct communication from doctors. Under HIPAA, doctors cannot share information without permission. Make sure your parent has signed a release that includes you. Then call the doctor’s office directly after major appointments.

    Use technology thoughtfully. A simple video call twice a week tells you more than a daily phone call. Watch for changes in appearance, energy, alertness, and surroundings. Is the home clean? Are they dressed? Do they seem like themselves?

    Consider a medical alert device. If your parent lives alone, a fall detection device gives both of you peace of mind. Many also include GPS.

    Ask specific questions. “How are you doing?” gets “fine.” “What did you have for dinner last night?” or “Did you make it to the pharmacy?” gets real information.

    Plan Your Visits Wisely

    Long-distance visits are not vacations — they are assessment and coordination trips. Make them count.

    Go to at least one doctor’s appointment. Seeing the doctor in person changes everything. You can ask questions, observe the interaction, and get a clearer picture than any phone update.

    Do a home safety walkthrough. Every visit, walk through the home with fresh eyes. Check the bathroom, the kitchen, the medications, the refrigerator. Look for signs of difficulty — burned pans, expired food, unpaid bills, clutter in walkways.

    Meet the neighbors. Introduce yourself, leave your number, and ask them to call you if anything seems off. Most people are happy to help once they know someone is paying attention.

    Have the hard conversations. Visits are the time to talk about the future while things are relatively calm — not during a crisis.

    When You Cannot Be There for a Crisis

    Have a plan before a crisis happens. Know which hospital is nearest, which neighbor can get there first, and what your parent’s wishes are for emergency care.

    If you need to travel unexpectedly, do not panic — assess first. Call your parent, call the neighbor, call the doctor. Get information before you book a flight. Many situations that sound alarming can be managed remotely until you can get there.

    Consider respite care or a short-term stay at an assisted living community if your parent needs temporary extra support while you arrange longer-term help.

    Questions to Ask

    “Is my parent’s doctor aware that I am the primary caregiver and do they have permission to speak with me?” “Do I have one trusted local person who can check on my parent and call me?” “Have I considered a geriatric care manager to be my eyes on the ground?” “Am I asking specific enough questions to get real information during calls?” “Do I have an emergency plan that does not require me to be there in person?”

    Helpful Resources

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