36M
falls are reported among adults 65+ in the US every year — making falls the leading cause of both fatal and non-fatal injuries in this age group. Most are preventable. And most are preceded by warning signs that families miss.

— CDC, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, 2023

The signs that a parent needs more support rarely arrive as a dramatic moment. They accumulate quietly — a freezer full of expired food here, an unexplained bruise there, a house that's just a little more dishevelled than it used to be. By the time families notice, a pattern has often been building for months.

This guide gives you a specific, structured way to assess what you're seeing — and what to do about it.

📋 What this guide covers
  • 15 specific warning signs across physical, cognitive, and home safety categories
  • What each sign actually means (and when it's urgent)
  • A step-by-step approach to starting the conversation
  • When to bring in a professional for an objective assessment

The 15 signs — what to look for and why it matters

Divide your observations into three categories. A pattern within any single category is more significant than an isolated incident across all three.

Physical signs (1–5)

1

Unexplained bruises or injuries

Bruises on the torso, back, or both sides of the body simultaneously are particularly concerning. Falls typically cause bruising on one side. Multiple unexplained injuries suggest either falls that aren't being reported or — rarely — abuse.

2

A recent fall, or near-miss

One fall doubles the risk of a second. If your parent has fallen in the last six months — even if they weren't hurt — this is a significant clinical warning sign that warrants a falls risk assessment from their doctor or an occupational therapist.

3

Noticeable weight loss

Unintentional weight loss of 5% or more in six months is clinically significant in older adults. Causes include difficulty cooking, loss of appetite, depression, medication side effects, or swallowing difficulties — all of which are addressable with the right intervention.

4

Difficulty with everyday tasks (ADLs)

Activities of daily living — bathing, dressing, preparing food, using the toilet — are the clinical benchmark for independence. Struggling with any of these is a direct signal that support is needed. Watch for: wearing the same clothes repeatedly, skipping showers, or meals becoming simpler and less nutritious.

5

Mobility changes

A shuffle gait, holding walls when walking, struggling to rise from a chair, or visible pain during movement all indicate increased fall risk. A mobility aid assessment and a review of footwear (worn soles, ill-fitting shoes) are good starting points.

Cognitive and behavioural signs (6–10)

6

Missed medications — with consequences

A pill organiser left untouched, or a medication being taken at the wrong dose, is a serious safety issue. It is also often the first concrete sign of executive function decline. A pill dispenser with alarms ($30–$80) is a practical starting point; a blister pack service from the pharmacy is another option.

7

Unpaid bills, financial confusion

Late utility notices, unopened mail, or unusual financial transactions (large cash withdrawals, payments to unfamiliar organisations) suggest either cognitive decline or the beginning of financial exploitation — both require immediate attention.

8

Confusion about dates, time, or place

Occasional forgetfulness is normal. Confusion about what year it is, not recognising familiar places, or becoming lost on a familiar route are not normal and warrant a medical evaluation. The GP is the right first call; they can refer for cognitive testing.

9

Social withdrawal

Giving up hobbies, declining invitations, or stopping contact with friends can signal depression, cognitive decline, or mobility difficulties that are making participation too hard. Depression affects 1 in 5 adults over 65 and is significantly underdiagnosed in this age group (NIH, 2024).

10

Driving concerns

New dents or scratches on the car, getting lost on familiar routes, running red lights, or other drivers reacting with horns are all signs that driving safety should be evaluated. An occupational therapist can conduct a formal driving assessment — this removes the conversation from the family dynamic entirely.

Home and safety signs (11–15)

11

Spoiled food in the fridge

Expired food that hasn't been discarded, or a fridge that's nearly empty when it shouldn't be, indicates either cognitive issues (not noticing), physical difficulty shopping, financial difficulty, or depression. This is one of the most reliable early warning signs practitioners look for.

12

Burn marks on cookware or stovetop

Evidence of forgotten pots on the stove is a serious fire and carbon monoxide risk. Options include stove knob covers, automatic stove shut-off devices ($60–$150), or a conversation about using the microwave for most meals. A smoke and CO detector check is also warranted.

13

A noticeably messier home

Not occasional clutter — a meaningful decline from the person's normal standards. Unwashed dishes accumulating, laundry not being done, a bathroom that isn't being cleaned. This is often the most visible sign to visiting family and the most frequently rationalised away.

14

Home safety hazards you didn't notice before

Loose rugs, no grab bars in the bathroom, poor lighting on stairs, extension cords across walkways. These may have always been present, but they matter more now. A professional home modification assessment from an occupational therapist can identify every hazard systematically.

15

Declining personal hygiene

Not bathing regularly, unwashed hair, wearing the same clothes for multiple days, or strong body odour may indicate that getting into the bath or shower has become physically difficult or unsafe. Bathroom safety modifications — grab bars, a shower seat, a handheld showerhead — often resolve this without additional home care.

What to do when you notice these signs

Noticing the signs is step one. Here's the practical sequence to follow:

  1. Document specifically what you observed — dates, locations, and exactly what you saw. "The fridge had expired milk from three weeks ago and almost no food" is more useful than "the fridge was empty." This documentation matters if you later need to involve a doctor, geriatric care manager, or attorney.
  2. Identify which category the signs fall into — physical, cognitive, or home safety — and how many you're seeing. Multiple signs within one category or signs across all three categories indicate a more urgent situation.
  3. Open the conversation with observations, not conclusions — "I noticed the stove had some burn marks — has that been happening?" rather than "I think you're no longer safe to cook." The first invites dialogue. The second triggers defensiveness.
  4. Request a GP appointment — ideally attend with your parent if possible. A geriatric assessment from their doctor provides an objective medical baseline and carries authority that family observations often don't.
  5. Address the highest-risk issues first — bathroom safety and fall prevention before aesthetic concerns. A grab bar installation costs $50–$200 and can be done in an afternoon. Don't let perfect be the enemy of good.
  6. Revisit the conversation regularly — needs change. Build in a regular check-in (monthly calls, quarterly visits) rather than waiting for the next crisis to prompt another assessment.

When to bring in professional help

📞 Bring in a professional when:

  • Occupational therapist (OT): Your parent has had a fall, is struggling with daily tasks, or you want an objective home safety assessment. OTs can prescribe home modifications, adaptive equipment, and therapy to restore function. Many assessments are covered by Medicare Part B after a referral. Cost without insurance: $150–$300 for a home assessment.
  • Geriatric care manager: The situation is complex, you live far away, or the family disagrees about next steps. Fees: $100–$200/hour. Find one at aginglifecare.org.
  • Geriatrician or GP with geriatric training: You're seeing signs of cognitive decline (signs 8–10 above) or multiple unexplained physical changes. A comprehensive geriatric assessment is the appropriate next step before making any care decisions.
  • Elder law attorney: If financial exploitation is suspected (sign 7), or if you're beginning to think about power of attorney, healthcare directives, or guardianship. Act quickly — legal tools work best when the person still has capacity to grant them.
  • Home care agency: Signs 1–5 or 11–15 are present but your parent is resistant to facility care. In-home care can be introduced gradually — a few hours of help with meals and housekeeping — and increased over time.

Frequently asked questions

How do I know when my aging parent needs more help?
Look for a pattern rather than a single incident. Warning signs fall into three categories: physical (unexplained bruises, weight loss, difficulty with daily tasks), cognitive (missed medications, unpaid bills, confusion about dates), and home safety (spoiled food in the fridge, burn marks on cookware, a noticeably messier home). Two or more signs in any category warrant a direct conversation.
What is the difference between normal aging and a warning sign?
Normal aging includes slower processing speed, occasional forgetfulness (like misplacing keys), and some reduction in stamina. Warning signs are different in character: unexplained weight loss is not normal; falling is not normal; being unable to remember a family member's name is not normal. When in doubt, a geriatric assessment from a physician or occupational therapist can provide an objective baseline.
How do I bring this up without causing conflict?
Lead with observation rather than judgment: "I noticed the fridge was pretty empty when I visited — are you finding it hard to get to the grocery store?" Avoid "you need to..." framing. The goal of the first conversation is to open a dialogue, not to announce a decision. Research suggests that adult children who express concern rather than give directives get better outcomes.
What is a geriatric care manager and when should I contact one?
A geriatric care manager (also called an aging life care professional) is a specialist — usually a social worker or nurse — who assesses older adults' needs, coordinates care, and advises families on options. They are most useful when you live far away, when the situation is complex, or when you need someone to coordinate between multiple providers. Fees range from $100–$200/hour. Find one at aginglifecare.org.
My parent refuses to discuss it. What do I do?
Resistance is normal and usually reflects fear — of losing independence, of being a burden, or of what the conversation might lead to. Try involving a trusted third party: their doctor, a sibling they're close to, or a long-time friend. A doctor's recommendation carries significantly more weight than a child's concern for most older adults. If safety is immediately at risk, consult an elder law attorney about legal options.
At what point should I consider moving my parent out of their home?
Consider a change when: there have been two or more falls in six months, there is evidence of self-neglect (spoiled food, untreated wounds, missed medications with medical consequences), cognitive decline has progressed to the point that the person cannot be left alone safely, or when 24-hour supervision is required that cannot be provided at home. These are not automatic triggers for facility care — home care and assisted living are both options — but they indicate the current arrangement needs to change.
📚 Sources
Last reviewed: April 2026 · Reviewed against CDC fall prevention guidelines and AOTA clinical standards · Next review: October 2026

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