When a Fall Signals It’s Time: A Decision Guide for Long-Term Care After an Older Adult Falls
Last reviewed: — Review date is particularly important for Medicare coverage, device specifications, and clinical guidance, which change frequently.
Why a Fall Is a Turning Point
A fall is rarely an isolated incident. For an older adult, it is often the first clear signal that the current living situation is no longer safe or sustainable. According to the CDC, more than one in four adults aged 65 and older falls each year, and falling once doubles the chances of falling again. In 2021 alone, falls caused over 38,000 deaths among older adults, making them the leading cause of injury death for that age group.
The consequences extend far beyond the immediate injury. A 2026 study published in the American Journal of Lifestyle Medicine found that falls significantly increased the risk of nursing home and skilled nursing facility placement in the following year. The researchers noted that preventative strategies targeting modifiable fall risk factors, such as strength and balance training, chronic disease management, and home safety intervention, could reduce fall incidence and the need for placement in nursing facilities.
The post-fall period is a critical decision window. Emergency department visits for older adult falls number roughly 3 million each year, and nearly 1 million of those lead to hospitalization. Within six months of a fall-related ED visit, research shows that 22.6% of older adults experience at least one recurrent fall, 42.6% revisit the ED, and fall-related injuries account for up to one-third of all skilled nursing facility admissions.
This is not a moment for panic, but it is a moment for deliberate action. The goal of this guide is to help families move from crisis mode to a structured decision process — one that considers the full range of options, from home modifications and paid caregiving to assisted living and skilled nursing — so that the choice made in the weeks after a fall is the right one for the long term.
The Immediate Post-Fall Care Path: From ED to Next Steps
When an older adult falls and is taken to the emergency department, the clinical team's first priority is to treat any injuries — fractures, head trauma, or soft tissue damage. But the discharge conversation is where the long-term care decision actually begins. Understanding what happens next, and what Medicare covers, is essential to avoiding a rushed and costly mistake.
The Hospital-to-SNF Pathway
If the fall results in a hospitalization that lasts at least three consecutive days (not counting the day of discharge), Medicare Part A may cover a subsequent stay in a skilled nursing facility (SNF). This is the most common route for post-fall rehabilitation. The SNF stay is intended to provide physical therapy, occupational therapy, and medical monitoring to help the older adult regain function and safely return home.
Medicare's SNF coverage follows a specific structure that families need to understand before making decisions:
| Days in SNF | What Medicare Pays | What You Pay |
|---|---|---|
| Days 1–20 | 100% of covered services after the Part A deductible is met | $0 per day (deductible of $1,736 per benefit period in 2026) |
| Days 21–100 | All covered services except the daily coinsurance | $217 per day (2026 coinsurance rate) |
| Day 101 and beyond | Nothing | All costs |
Read the Full Guide
FAQs provide a concise answer. For comprehensive coverage, see these related guides.
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