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The phone rings. No answer. You drive over and find your mother on the kitchen floor — she fell hours ago. This scenario plays out in millions of American homes every year. According to the CDC, more than 36 million older adults fall each year in the United States, and roughly one in three cannot get up without assistance. The time between a fall and receiving help is often the difference between a full recovery and a life-altering complication.
If a loved one lives alone or spends significant time without supervision, knowing exactly what to do — and having the right systems in place beforehand — can save their life. This guide walks you through both the immediate response steps and the preventive technology that ensures help is never more than seconds away.
Medical professionals use the term "long lie" to describe a fall victim who remains on the floor for an hour or more. This is not just uncomfortable — it is medically dangerous. Prolonged immobility after a fall can cause dehydration, hypothermia, pressure sores, muscle breakdown (rhabdomyolysis), and pneumonia. Research published in the Journal of the American Geriatrics Society found that seniors who experience a long lie after a fall have a significantly higher risk of hospitalization and death within the following year.
The core problem is simple: if no one knows a fall has occurred, no one can respond. Traditional solutions — phone calls, scheduled check-ins, neighbors looking in — all depend on someone noticing the absence of contact. That gap can stretch from minutes to hours to days.
If you discover or suspect a loved one has fallen and is alone, follow these steps in order:
Never give a fallen person food or water before medical evaluation — they may require surgery, and eating or drinking beforehand can cause dangerous complications during anesthesia.
The majority of home falls are caused by loose rugs, poor lighting, cluttered pathways, and slippery bathroom floors. A professional home safety assessment — available free through many Area Agencies on Aging — can identify and correct these hazards systematically.
A simple daily phone call at a set time creates a baseline. If the call is not answered and a callback is not returned within 30 minutes, a family member or neighbor goes to check. This low-tech system catches many situations before they become emergencies.
Bathroom grab bars near the toilet and in the shower, non-slip mats, and raised toilet seats dramatically reduce fall risk in the highest-risk room in the home. These are inexpensive modifications with outsized impact.
Many common medications — blood pressure drugs, sedatives, diuretics, and even antihistamines — increase fall risk through dizziness, orthostatic hypotension, or impaired balance. Ask a pharmacist or physician to review all medications annually with fall risk in mind.
Programs like Tai Chi and the CDC's STEADI initiative have strong evidence for reducing falls in older adults. Even 20 minutes of balance exercises three times per week produces measurable improvements in stability within 8–12 weeks.
All five prevention strategies above reduce the likelihood of a fall — but they cannot eliminate it. The critical gap remains: what happens when a fall occurs and the person cannot reach a phone or press a button?
This is the problem that automatic fall detection technology was designed to solve. Unlike traditional medical alert buttons that require the wearer to press them — which is impossible if they are unconscious or disoriented — modern sensor-based wearables detect the signature motion pattern of a fall automatically and trigger an emergency alert without any action from the wearer.
SENTRICK CARE™, part of the SENTRICK Shield™ ecosystem, uses a combination of accelerometer data, gyroscope readings, and AI-powered motion analysis to distinguish a fall from normal activity with high accuracy. When a fall is detected, the device immediately alerts designated family members via the SENTRICK™ app, sends the GPS location of the wearer, and — if no response is received within 60 seconds — automatically contacts emergency services. The entire sequence takes less than 90 seconds from fall to emergency dispatch.
SENTRICK CARE™ works even when the wearer is unconscious, disoriented, or physically unable to press a button — the most common scenarios in serious falls.
SENTRICK Shield™ combines automatic fall detection, GPS tracking, SOS alerts, and two-way communication in a lightweight wearable — giving families real-time peace of mind, 24/7.
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