Solving Life's Next Chapter Podcast - Cutting Edge Information for Your Powerful Senior Years
Remember college shopping with your kids to find the best school for them?
Or, the other milestone of getting married and you had to find the place for your wedding and all the accoutrements?
Navigating the unknown is tricky, at first. So knowing the issues and milestones as you age and how to make good choices to address them for your aging parents or even for yourself is critical.
Have you shared how you want you want your golden years to look with your family? Does your family know what you want to happen when you are no longer here?
Do they know your wishes about your health care so they can help you in the best way possible if you are unable to tell them when that time comes?
What about your plans for living when you can no longer live alone?
Knowing these personal choices and the answers to these questions is a guessing game. Plus, just like paying for your dream wedding was a concern, so is paying for in-home help as you age. And moving to a home that offers assistance on the campus such as an assisted living community can also be pricy. What's involved in downsizing to a smaller home so that you can liquidate some equity to help pay for future services, such as caregivers? Or what kind of plan is needed to manage daily life if a family member receives a dementia diagnosis?
Did you know there are dozens of ways to answer these questions? There are!
But, which are YOUR best answers? Few of us ever thinks about managing aging issues, but the truth is, it happens to every person in every walk of life, every single day. There are 60,000 baby boomers turning 65 EVERY SINGLE DAY.
Listen to our Solving Life's Next Chapter Podcast and get to know me and my vetted, friendly guests who have answers we all need and ideas we can weigh as we age or as we help our parents age.
Let's Solve YOUR Life's Next Chapter together!
Solving Life's Next Chapter Podcast - Cutting Edge Information for Your Powerful Senior Years
SOLVING LIFE'S NEXT CHAPTER: The critical days after the hospital
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The Critical Days After a Hospital Stay: What Families Need to Know Before Something Falls Through the Cracks with Lori Gudino, Executive Vice President of Operations for Sante, a division of Alumus
For many families, the hospital discharge feels like the finish line. A loved one survived surgery, illness, or a medical emergency, and everyone breathes a sigh of relief once they are finally sent home.
But according to Lori Gudino with Alumus, the reality is this:
The most dangerous part of recovery often begins after the patient leaves the hospital.
Those first few days and weeks after hospitalization can determine whether someone heals properly… or ends up right back in the emergency room.
As someone who works closely with seniors, families, and healthcare professionals, I have seen firsthand how overwhelming this transition can become—especially for adult children trying to balance work, caregiving, and their own families while suddenly managing medications, appointments, mobility issues, and medical decisions.
This is exactly why home healthcare and transitional care services are becoming more important than ever.
What Falls Through the Cracks After Hospitalization?
Many people assume that once a patient is discharged, they are “better.”
But in reality, many seniors go home still weak, confused, medicated, and vulnerable.
Lori Gudino explains that one of the biggest problems families face is simply this:
There is often no clear roadmap for what happens next.
Families are suddenly expected to manage:
- Multiple medications with changing instructions
- Follow-up doctor appointments
- Physical therapy schedules
- Wound care
- Fall prevention
- Nutrition and hydration
- Transportation
- Signs of infection or complications
- Cognitive confusion or memory issues
And many loved ones are simply not medically trained to handle all of it.
The Hidden Problem: Medication Mismanagement
One of the biggest reasons seniors return to the hospital is medication confusion.
A patient may leave the hospital with:
- New prescriptions
- Adjusted dosages
- Medications that were discontinued
- Complex instructions that are difficult to understand
Now imagine an 82-year-old patient trying to organize 10–15 medications while recovering from surgery or illness.
Or an adult child trying to manage this from another city.
This is where mistakes happen.
Wrong doses. Missed medications. Dangerous interactions. Duplicate prescriptions.
Sometimes families don’t even realize something is wrong until a crisis occurs.
Why Recovery at Home Can Become Unsafe
Many homes were never designed for recovery after a hospitalization.
Lori Gudino shares that families often underestimate how quickly mobility and independence can change after a hospital stay.
A loved one who walked independently two weeks ago may now struggle with:
- Stairs
- Getting in and out of bed
- Showering safely
- Cooking meals
- Remembering appointments
- Using the restroom independently
Falls become a major concern during this time.
In fact, many seniors are discharged home before families fully understand the level of care now required.
That gap between “hospital care” and “independent living” is where so many families feel lost.
Why Home Healthcare Is So Important
This is where companies like Alumus and Alante step in to help bridge the gap.
Home healthcare is not just about sending someone to check vitals.
It is about creating a support system that helps patients safely recover while helping families avoid burnout and confusion.
According to Lori Gudino, quality transitional care can help:
- Reduce hospital readmissions
- Improve medication management
- Monitor warning signs early
- Coordinate communication between providers
- Provide therapy and nursing support
- Help families understand care plans
- Improve patient confidence and recovery outcomes
Most importantly, it gives families peace of mind.
Because when families are trying to navigate recovery alone, things can easily fall through the cracks.
Adult Children Are Often Unprepared
One of the hardest realities families face is realizing that their parent can no longer safely manage their own healthcare.
Many adult children suddenly find themselves:
- Scheduling appointments
- Managing medications
- Talking to doctors
- Coordinating transportation
- Handling insurance questions
- Monitoring memory changes
- Making difficult healthcare decisions
And often, this happens during an emotional crisis.
Lori Gudino emphasizes that families should not wait until a major emergency happens before putting support systems in place.
The earlier families prepare, the more options they have.
The Importance of Having the Right Documents
Hospitalizations also expose another major issue:
Many families do not have updated healthcare documents in place.
This can create enormous stress during medical emergencies.
Important documents may include:
- Healthcare Power of Attorney
- Financial Power of Attorney
- Living Will
- HIPAA Authorization
- Trust documents
- Emergency contact lists
- Medication lists
Without these documents, families can face delays, confusion, and even court involvement in some situations.
Recovery Is Not Meant to Be Managed Alone
One of the most powerful messages from Lori Gudino is this:
Families do not have to navigate this alone.
Healthcare today is complicated. Hospital stays are shorter. Patients are discharged quicker. Families are expected to do more than ever before.
That is why having compassionate, experienced healthcare partners matter.
Companies like Alumus, Sante, Aleca, and Alante are helping families create safer transitions after hospitalization—because recovery is not just about leaving the hospital.
It is about what happens next.
Final Thoughts
The days after a hospitalization are critical.
This is often when:
- Confusion begins
- Falls happen
- Medications are missed
- Caregivers become overwhelmed
- Seniors decline rapidly without proper support
But with the right planning, resources, and healthcare partners, families can avoid many of these preventable issues.
As Lori Gudino reminds families:
The goal is not just to survive the hospitalization. The goal is to recover safely, confidently, and with dignity.
If your family is navigating a hospitalization, recovery, or care transition, now is the time to ask questions, seek support, and prepare before another crisis occurs.
_____________________________________________________________________
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If you have questions, reach out anytime.
Lydia Wietsma, REALTOR®
Certified Probate Real Estate Specialist (CPRES)
Senior Real Estate Specialist (SRES)
NextHome Power Realty
🌐 www.probaterealtyhelp.com
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