• Home
  • Politics
  • Health
  • World
  • Business
  • Finance
  • Tech
  • More
    • Sports
    • Entertainment
    • Lifestyle
What's Hot

He works two hours a month to make six figures a year — why he says ditching the 9-to-5 is ‘the ultimate power’

July 13, 2026

Tributes Pour in for New Zealand Actor Sam Neill, a Look at His Life and Career

July 13, 2026

Iran Ceasefire is Over, But Talks to Continue

July 13, 2026
Facebook Twitter Instagram
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions
Monday, July 13
Patriot Now NewsPatriot Now News
  • Home
  • Politics

    Texas Hispanics swung hard to Trump. A new poll shows they’re furious at his deportations.

    July 12, 2026

    The high-stakes, battleground Senate race that no one is talking about

    July 12, 2026

    Lindsey Graham’s Passing Is Another Stage In The Death Of Trumpism

    July 12, 2026

    How ICE melted from view at the World Cup

    July 12, 2026

    The secret to becoming a sporting superpower

    July 12, 2026
  • Health

    Lindsey Graham Cause Of Death, Aortic Dissection. An ER Doc Explains

    July 13, 2026

    Supporting Science Is An Act Of Patriotism

    July 13, 2026

    AAIC 2026: Researchers focus on tau, target blood-brain barrier

    July 12, 2026

    Lindsey Graham’s Sudden Death Sparks Questions About Cardiac Arrest

    July 12, 2026

    July 13 Is Deadline To Comment On New Trump OMB Rule That Shifts Power

    July 12, 2026
  • World

    Iran Ceasefire is Over, But Talks to Continue

    July 13, 2026

    Texas Man Gets 40 Years for Leading Violent Online Child Exploitation Ring

    July 13, 2026

    Colombia’s Incoming Conservative Admin to Close Its Embassy in Cuba

    July 13, 2026

    Iran Reports New Attacks On Military Targets On Its Largest Island Near The Strait Of Hormuz

    July 13, 2026

    Factory Fire in ‘Shoe Capital’ City Kills at Least 28

    July 13, 2026
  • Business

    ATF Rule Could Cause Classic Showdown Between Mom And Pop Shops Versus Online Retailers

    July 10, 2026

    Costco Shows That You Can Build A Thriving Business With One Simple Trick (Pay Your Workers)

    July 9, 2026

    The Agency Elizabeth Warren Built Now Advances Trump’s Agenda

    July 9, 2026

    Meta To Shell Out Billions For New AI Data Center Outside US

    July 9, 2026

    How Big Banks Are Scheming To Jack Up Your Fees

    July 8, 2026
  • Finance

    He works two hours a month to make six figures a year — why he says ditching the 9-to-5 is ‘the ultimate power’

    July 13, 2026

    Mark Cuban has strong words on AI companies and job losses

    July 13, 2026

    Spectrum makes significant decision as customer losses mount

    July 13, 2026

    Costco and Walmart capture grocery-store crowns

    July 13, 2026

    Leading energy company files for bankruptcy

    July 13, 2026
  • Tech

    LAPD Cuts Ties with License-Plate Camera Vendor over ‘Who Owns the Data’

    July 12, 2026

    Apple Lawsuit Accuses OpenAI of Stealing Trade Secrets in Massive Scheme

    July 11, 2026

    Bloomberg Claims Startup Co-Founded by Bill Gates’ Daughter Cheats on Sales Credit

    July 11, 2026

    Nobel Prize-Winning Chemist Leaves U.S. to Join Chinese AI Project

    July 11, 2026

    European Commission Finds Meta Violated Digital Services Act with Addictive Design Features

    July 11, 2026
  • More
    • Sports
    • Entertainment
    • Lifestyle
Patriot Now NewsPatriot Now News
Home»Health»Elderly Trauma Often Causes Rapid Decline. How Adult Children Can Help
Health

Elderly Trauma Often Causes Rapid Decline. How Adult Children Can Help

May 29, 2026No Comments7 Mins Read
Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Elderly Trauma Often Causes Rapid Decline. How Adult Children Can Help
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Elderly man lying on floor after fall

getty

On May 22nd, Sen. Angus King of Maine held up an $11 bath mat on the Senate floor and stated, “Send out 20 or 30 million of these and that $100 million cost of falls would fall significantly.” His proposal is for Medicare to cover basic bathroom safety equipment, such as grab bars and nonslip mats, arguing that the math is straightforward: prevention costs far less than hospitalizations and rehabilitation. As of today, Medicare covers the cost of a broken hip, but not the equipment that might have prevented injury.

The senator’s instinct reflects a broader and underappreciated reality I see far too often in the emergency department. Trauma in our elderly population is not simply an isolated accident – it is often the smoke signal that divides a life into “before the fall” and “after the fall.”

How Serious are Fall-Related Injuries in the Elderly?

“Hip fractures are the injury that most families worry about, and the mortality data is sobering,” says Dr. Kalpana Shankar, Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine at Harvard Medical School and Brigham and Women’s Hospital. “Families often walk into the ED thinking they’re dealing with a broken bone,” says Shankar. “We’re sometimes dealing with the beginning of the end.” One-year mortality after hip fracture in older adults is approximately 22%, and climbs substantially when dementia or frailty is already present. But hip fractures are not the only dangerous injury in the elderly population.

Dr. Kalpana Shankar

© All Rights Reserved Mainframe Photographics Inc 2022

Shankar tells me that falls are the leading cause of traumatic brain injury in older adults, accounting for 51% of TBI cases. Adults 75 and older carry the highest rates of TBI-related hospitalizations and death. A significant proportion of elderly patients are on medications that thin their blood – called anticoagulation – for conditions like atrial fibrillation or stroke prevention. When a patient on anticoagulation falls, they have a risk of intracranial hemorrhage, which carries a mortality rate of 15.5% among hospitalized elderly patients.

What makes TBI particularly dangerous in this population is how easily it is underestimated. Ground-level falls might seem benign, but are the most common cause of traumatic intracranial hemorrhage in older adults. I have cared for patients who arrived days after a fall with progressive confusion and vomiting and were found to have an intracranial hemorrhage. Shankar notes that these patients who fall from standing carry significantly higher long-term mortality than those with TBI from higher-impact mechanisms, yet the mechanism itself leads clinicians and families alike to underestimate the severity.

Rib fractures, spinal fractures, and wrist fractures are also common. Spinal fractures are particularly deceptive as they might not be immediately life-threatening but can produce chronic pain, lack of movement, and a gradual functional decline that families do not always connect to the original fall. Rib fractures hurt sufficiently that patients avoid deep breathing, creating conditions for pneumonia.

What Does Decline Look Like After Injury?

“For older adults, whether it is due to traumatic injury or medical illnesses, ED visits signal a change in life trajectories,” says Dr. Kei Ouchi, Associate Professor of Emergency Medicine at Harvard Medical School. The consequences of a fall extend well beyond the acute injury. Among older adults admitted to the ICU, 53.4% experience functional decline or early death. Among older ICU survivors, fewer than half achieve meaningful functional recovery within six months. Notably, even older adults who visit the emergency department but are not hospitalized experience functional decline at a rate of 17% at six months.

“The evidence consistently shows that traumatic injury in older adults triggers functional decline that is persistent and often irreversible,” says Ouchi, “particularly in those with pre-existing frailty or cognitive impairment.”

Shankar adds that there is also a psychological dimension that receives insufficient attention. Fear of falling that develops after an injury can be as damaging as the physical trauma itself. “Patients reduce activity to feel safer, lose muscle mass and balance in the process, and become more likely to fall than they were before,” she adds.

Ouchi describes the complexity of answering questions about prognosis or recovery after a fall. “We don’t always know if they will recover. We don’t want to scare them,” says Ouchi. He shares that instead of having an honest conversation about the patient’s injury and future, physicians often “punt this responsibility to the next doctor — who equally will not do it.” The result is that families enter recovery expecting a return to prior function. When they find out otherwise, Ouchi says, “suffering for the family is inevitable.”

Advance care planning — the practice of documenting patient wishes before a crisis — was designed to solve exactly this problem. In theory, a completed directive would spare families from impossible decisions at the bedside. In practice, it has largely failed. Documents get lost, ignored, or completed so far in advance that they no longer reflect what a patient actually wants in the hospital. The field has since shifted toward something more practical: ‘in-the-moment’ decision-making guided by real-time conversations.

Where Do the System Falls Short?

Shankar shares that fewer than half of older adults who fall report it to their physician, often out of embarrassment or fear of losing independence. “More than 60% of primary care physicians screen for fall risk but only when a patient raises the concern directly”, she adds. This reactive posture may miss most patients who need intervention. Emergency physicians, focused on the presenting injury, rarely ask why the fall happened. Older adults who come to the ED after a fall have a 30% higher chance of falling again within six months than age-matched controls, yet the standard workup does not systematically address underlying risk. As Sen. Angus King picked up, insurers will cover a hip replacement but lag on physical therapy, medication reviews, and community exercise programs that carry strong evidence for prevention. The public environment, uneven sidewalks, inadequate street lighting, limited places to rest, also contributes to fall risk at a population level that clinical interventions alone cannot address.

What Can Adult Children Do Today?

The evidence on prevention is more actionable than most families realize.

Review medications. Between 65% and 93% of patients admitted after a fall were actively taking fall-risk-increasing drugs at the time of injury. The list of medications that can lead to falls is longer than people might suspect, such as loop diuretics, antidepressants, benzodiazepines, antipsychotics, and opioids. “The problem is that most of these medications were prescribed by different specialists who have no visibility into each other’s prescribing,” says Shankar. She recommends asking the primary care physician to review the full medication list with fall risk explicitly in mind.

Prioritize exercise. “I think exercise should be written on a prescription pad,” says Shankar. A meta-analysis of 24 randomized controlled trials found that Tai Chi reduces fall risk by approximately 24%, with results improving with longer and more frequent practice. It addresses balance, proprioception, and leg strength simultaneously, critical functions that deteriorate with age. Ouchi recommends constant physical strengthening, specifically weight lifting.

Address vision. Expedited cataract surgery has been identified as a cost-effective fall prevention strategy.

Modify the home. An environmental safety evaluation is key. Review the house for rugs, cords, or uneven surfaces that can cause a slip. Place a mat around smooth surfaces that are often wet, in the kitchen and bathroom, for instance. If stairs are a risk, consider safer bedroom placement. If falls happen at night during bathroom trips, consider a bedside commode.

After a fall, ask why it happened. Advocate for a medication review and physical therapy referral before discharge. Watch for signs of cognitive or functional decline in the weeks that follow, even when the acute injury appears resolved.

Have the values conversation early. Ouchi’s work focuses on helping patients articulate their goals and acceptable trade-offs before a crisis forces those decisions under pressure. He recommends using conversation guides as families answer difficult questions: What does quality of life mean to your parent? What would they be willing to endure — and what would they not? These questions are substantially easier to answer before a fall than in an emergency department. He states that the goal is to maintain the patient’s dignity and reduce suffering.

See also  Humanized Kidney Development Described In Chimeric Pig Embryos
adult Children Decline elderly rapid Trauma
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email

Related Posts

Lindsey Graham Cause Of Death, Aortic Dissection. An ER Doc Explains

July 13, 2026

Supporting Science Is An Act Of Patriotism

July 13, 2026

AAIC 2026: Researchers focus on tau, target blood-brain barrier

July 12, 2026

Lindsey Graham’s Sudden Death Sparks Questions About Cardiac Arrest

July 12, 2026
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Top Posts

Is Trump Blaming The Wrong Culprit For Unaffordable Houses? 

January 10, 2026

‘I Have Impending-Doom Feelings Most Of The Day’: Billie Eilish Says Fame Takes A Huge Toll On Her

September 28, 2023

DC Comics Publishes Pride Month Issue with Trans ‘Wonder Woman’

June 6, 2026

Feds Launch Investigation into Tesla Crash that Claimed the Life of Three-Month-Old Baby

July 20, 2023
Don't Miss

He works two hours a month to make six figures a year — why he says ditching the 9-to-5 is ‘the ultimate power’

Finance July 13, 2026

wirestock/Envato Some workers have been mandated back to the office after settling into work-from-home life,…

Tributes Pour in for New Zealand Actor Sam Neill, a Look at His Life and Career

July 13, 2026

Iran Ceasefire is Over, But Talks to Continue

July 13, 2026

Donald Trump Was Target Of ‘Very Specific’ Iranian Assassination Plot

July 13, 2026
About
About

This is your World, Tech, Health, Entertainment and Sports website. We provide the latest breaking news straight from the News industry.

We're social. Connect with us:

Facebook Twitter Instagram Pinterest
Categories
  • Business (4,399)
  • Entertainment (5,644)
  • Finance (4,166)
  • Health (2,460)
  • Lifestyle (1,897)
  • Politics (3,861)
  • Sports (4,852)
  • Tech (2,371)
  • Uncategorized (4)
  • World (5,620)
Our Picks

What drives the price of gold?

July 9, 2026

Dodgers Fan Runs on the Field for Surprise Marriage Proposal, Gets Smashed by Security

April 4, 2023

Surfer Star, Olympic Hopeful Israel Barona Dead at 34

November 3, 2023
Popular Posts

He works two hours a month to make six figures a year — why he says ditching the 9-to-5 is ‘the ultimate power’

July 13, 2026

Tributes Pour in for New Zealand Actor Sam Neill, a Look at His Life and Career

July 13, 2026

Iran Ceasefire is Over, But Talks to Continue

July 13, 2026
© 2026 Patriotnownews.com - All rights reserved.
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms & Conditions

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.