Articles

Post-Admission Stabilization in Assisted Living: The First 14 Days, Functional Baselines, and Falls-Prevention by Design
Many assisted living “failures” happen in the first 14 days because baseline function is guessed, routines are not rebuilt, and falls risk is treated as inevitable. This article sets out a practical stabilization model—functional baselines, supervision levels, and restoration routines—so transitions reduce decline rather than accelerate it. Read more...
Assisted Living Transition Documentation: Minimum Viable Handover, Data Sharing Consent, and Audit-Ready Continuity
Transition documentation fails when it is written for compliance rather than day-one delivery. This article defines a minimum viable handover for assisted living, explains how to operationalize data-sharing consent, and sets out audit-ready routines that keep hospitals, PCPs, LTSS partners, and families aligned during the first 30 days. Read more...
Cognitive Impairment During Assisted Living Transitions: Capacity, Consent, Family Communication, and Safe Escalation
Transitions fail quickly when cognitive impairment is treated as a “behavior issue” rather than a communication and decision-making risk. This article sets out dementia-aware transition controls—capacity checks, consent clarity, and family communication routines—that reduce safeguarding incidents and avoidable crisis transfers. Read more...
Medication Reconciliation Across Assisted Living Transitions: MAR Integrity, High-Risk Med Controls, and Deprescribing Workflow
Medication harm during assisted living transitions is usually an information and accountability failure, not “noncompliance.” This article sets out operational controls that protect MAR integrity across hospital, pharmacy, family, and LTSS partners—so high-risk meds, PRNs, and taper plans don’t collapse in the first two weeks. Read more...
Assisted Living Admissions from Home and Hospital: Preventing the First 30-Day Failure Window
The highest risk period in assisted living is the first 30 days after admission. This article examines how weak intake decisions, incomplete handovers, and unrealistic care assumptions create early failures—and how providers design admission controls that stabilize residents and protect outcomes. Read more...
Assisted Living Discharges That Don’t Collapse: Managing Step-Down, Hospital Return, and Service Reconfiguration
Assisted living discharges often fail not because residents are too complex, but because step-down planning is rushed, roles are unclear, and post-move oversight is weak. This article sets out operational discharge controls that stabilize residents leaving assisted living, reduce hospital bounce-backs, and protect providers across LTSS systems. Read more...
Assisted Living and Avoidable ED Transfers: On-Site Response Models and Post-Transfer Learning Loops
Avoidable ED transfers from assisted living usually reflect missing on-site assessment capacity, unclear escalation routes, or weak post-event learning—not “high need” alone. This article explains practical response models and governance routines that reduce unnecessary transfers while protecting safety, rights, and family confidence. Read more...
Assisted Living Interfaces: Role Clarity, Handover Integrity, and Safe Transitions Across LTSS
Assisted living transitions fail when “who does what” is unclear and handovers are written for compliance rather than day-one delivery. This article sets out practical controls for role boundaries, medication safety, and escalation pathways across assisted living, home health, and LTSS case management—so transitions reduce risk rather than create it. Read more...