This case study documents the post-discharge home healthcare management of a 73-year-old woman in Patna, Bihar, who presented with progressive hearing loss, recurrent vertigo episodes, a fall with minor head injury, and significant functional decline. Through structured multidisciplinary home care — including nursing, physiotherapy, and caregiver education — the patient achieved measurable improvements in balance, communication, confidence, and social participation over a 10-week period.
Mrs. Asha Kumari, a 73-year-old widowed woman residing in Patna, Bihar, is a retired homemaker who lived with her son (46 years) and daughter-in-law (42 years). Her son served as the primary caregiver, while her daughter-in-law provided secondary support. Prior to this episode, Mrs. Kumari had been managing her daily activities with increasing difficulty over several years due to progressive hearing loss.
She had a documented history of severe bilateral sensorineural hearing loss that had been gradually worsening over an extended period. This hearing impairment had significantly affected her ability to communicate with family members, particularly in group settings or environments with background noise. Over time, the communication difficulties contributed to reduced social engagement, diminished confidence, and a tendency to withdraw from family interactions and community activities.
In addition to her hearing condition, Mrs. Kumari had been diagnosed with hypertension, which was under medical management. She also carried diagnoses of osteoarthritis affecting both knees, which contributed to discomfort during mobility, and vitamin D deficiency, a known contributor to muscle weakness and increased fall risk in elderly individuals. Notably, no history of stroke or dementia was documented in her medical records.
The combination of sensorineural hearing loss, recurrent vertigo, bilateral knee osteoarthritis, hypertension, and vitamin D deficiency created a compounding risk profile for falls. Sensorineural hearing loss affects the inner ear, which also houses the vestibular apparatus responsible for balance. When vestibular function is compromised alongside reduced proprioception from knee arthritis and muscle weakness from vitamin D deficiency, the patient’s postural stability becomes significantly impaired. Each condition alone may be manageable, but together they create a clinical scenario where fall risk escalates markedly. This understanding was central to planning the home care intervention, as addressed in our broader guidance on recognizing mobility issues in aging loved ones.
Mrs. Kumari experienced repeated episodes of dizziness, imbalance, and unsteadiness over the days preceding her hospital visit. During one such episode at home, she sustained a fall that resulted in a minor head injury. This event prompted the family to seek urgent medical attention, leading to her admission for evaluation and stabilization. The fall itself was a critical clinical event — not solely because of the head injury, but because it demonstrated that her existing risk factors had transitioned from theoretical concerns to an actual adverse event requiring medical intervention.
At the time of admission, the patient’s functional status reflected significant impairment. She was able to feed and groom herself independently and retained the capacity for personal decision-making. However, she required assistance with bathing, meal preparation, and communication during medical appointments. She was fully dependent on others for outdoor mobility, shopping, and hospital visits. These functional limitations, combined with her medical conditions, painted a clear picture of an elderly patient at high risk of further falls and functional decline without structured intervention. This aligns with patterns frequently observed in elderly care at home settings.
Severe Bilateral Sensorineural Hearing Loss with Recurrent Vertigo and High Fall Risk
During the 7-day hospital stay, a comprehensive multidisciplinary evaluation was undertaken to understand the full extent of Mrs. Kumari’s condition and to rule out acute neurological emergencies. The assessments included:
The ENT evaluation confirmed severe bilateral sensorineural hearing loss. This type of hearing loss originates from damage to the inner ear (cochlea) or the auditory nerve pathways, distinguishing it from conductive hearing loss which involves the outer or middle ear. The severity was classified as profound enough to significantly impair daily communication without amplification. A hearing aid assessment and optimization was initiated during the hospital stay to determine the most appropriate device and settings for the patient’s specific hearing profile.
A thorough neurological examination was conducted to rule out acute brain injury following the fall and head injury. No evidence of acute intracranial hemorrhage, stroke, or other acute neurological pathology was identified. This was a critical finding, as it confirmed that the patient’s vertigo and imbalance were related to her vestibular and auditory condition rather than a new central nervous system event. The absence of stroke or dementia in her history was reconfirmed. This evaluation is consistent with the careful neurological monitoring that forms part of comprehensive doctor home visit services.
The vestibular assessment evaluated the function of the patient’s balance system. Given that the inner ear houses both the cochlear and vestibular apparatus, the presence of severe sensorineural hearing loss raised the possibility of concurrent vestibular dysfunction. The assessment findings were consistent with vestibular impairment contributing to the patient’s episodes of vertigo and imbalance, establishing the clinical basis for vestibular rehabilitation as a core component of the recovery plan.
A formal fall risk assessment was conducted, taking into account the patient’s age, hearing loss, vertigo, osteoarthritis, vitamin D deficiency, recent fall history, and functional limitations. The assessment classified the patient as being at high risk for recurrent falls. This classification was not based on any single factor but on the cumulative effect of multiple interacting risk factors — a pattern well-documented in geriatric medicine. The assessment informed the intensity and structure of the subsequent home care plan, including the decision to provide a patient attendant for 12 hours daily. Understanding fall risk is fundamental to effective fall prevention strategies.
| Condition | Clinical Significance | Impact on Fall Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Hypertension | Under medical management; required ongoing monitoring to ensure blood pressure stability, as both hypertensive episodes and medication-related hypotension can contribute to dizziness | Moderate |
| Osteoarthritis – Both Knees | Causes pain and reduced range of motion during walking, transfers, and standing; contributes to altered gait pattern and reduced proprioceptive input from the knee joints | Moderate |
| Vitamin D Deficiency | Associated with proximal muscle weakness, reduced grip strength, slower gait speed, and impaired bone mineralization — all of which increase both fall risk and fracture risk if a fall occurs | High |
Table 1: Associated conditions and their relationship to fall risk in this patient. Fall risk classification reflects the contribution of each individual condition.
Mrs. Kumari was admitted for a total of 7 days. The hospitalization served multiple purposes: acute stabilization of vertigo symptoms, comprehensive diagnostic evaluation to rule out serious intracranial pathology, initiation of hearing aid optimization, introduction of balance rehabilitation, and detailed discharge planning that incorporated home healthcare arrangements.
At the time of discharge, Mrs. Kumari’s acute vertigo symptoms had been medically stabilized. The minor head injury from the fall had been evaluated and did not require surgical or invasive intervention. Hearing aids had been fitted and initial optimization completed, though the patient had not yet adapted to consistent use. The in-hospital physiotherapy had provided a foundation for balance rehabilitation, but the patient remained at high fall risk and required continued, intensive rehabilitation in her home environment.
The discharge advice specifically recommended home-based rehabilitation and regular follow-up. This recommendation was clinically appropriate because the patient’s primary needs at this stage were not acute medical management but rather rehabilitation, adaptation, safety optimization, and caregiver education — interventions that are most effectively delivered in the patient’s actual living environment where real-world challenges exist. This approach is consistent with established principles of post-hospital discharge care for senior citizens.
The decision to transition Mrs. Kumari from hospital to home-based care was driven by specific clinical reasoning, not merely by a preference for home-based services. Several factors made home healthcare the most appropriate setting for her continued recovery:
Prolonged hospitalization in elderly patients carries independent risks that can outweigh the benefits once the acute phase is resolved. These risks include hospital-acquired infections, delirium (particularly in patients with sensory impairment), deconditioning from reduced physical activity, sleep disruption, and psychological distress from an unfamiliar environment. Mrs. Kumari’s acute vertigo had been medically stabilized, her head injury did not require ongoing inpatient monitoring, and her remaining needs — balance rehabilitation, hearing aid adaptation, and caregiver education — were rehabilitation-focused rather than acute-care-focused. Continuing her hospital stay would have exposed her to unnecessary risks without providing additional clinical benefit. This principle is explored in our analysis of early hospital discharge considerations for elderly patients.
The home care plan for Mrs. Kumari was structured around three complementary pillars — home nursing, physiotherapy, and patient attendant support — delivered in a coordinated manner over 10 weeks. Each pillar addressed specific aspects of the patient’s needs, and their integration was essential to achieving the defined goals.
The home nursing component was designed to provide clinical monitoring, medication oversight, and health education. At three visits per week, the nurse maintained regular surveillance of the patient’s medical stability without creating unnecessary dependency.
The physiotherapy component was the most intensive element of the home care plan, reflecting the central role of vestibular rehabilitation and balance training in this patient’s recovery. Five sessions per week provided the frequency necessary to promote vestibular compensation — the process by which the brain adapts to altered vestibular input. This intensity is consistent with evidence-based approaches to physiotherapy at home for vestibular conditions.
The patient attendant provided continuous daytime supervision and assistance, bridging the gap between the nurse’s clinical visits and the physiotherapist’s rehabilitation sessions. The 12-hour daily coverage was determined by the patient’s high fall risk and her need for support during activities of daily living that carried fall hazard. The attendant’s role was complementary to, not a replacement for, the clinical services. This model of integrated support is central to effective elderly care services at home.
Specific equipment was arranged to support the patient’s safety and rehabilitation at home. Several items were sourced through medical equipment rental in Patna, while others were recommended for permanent home installation.
The following timeline documents the patient’s clinical progression through the 10-week home healthcare period. Each phase reflects the integrated contributions of nursing, physiotherapy, attendant care, and family engagement.
The home healthcare team conducted a comprehensive initial assessment in the patient’s home environment. The nurse evaluated the home for fall hazards, verified medication availability and understanding, and established a baseline for vital sign monitoring. The physiotherapist assessed the patient’s current balance, gait pattern with the walker, transfer ability, and lower limb strength to establish a rehabilitation baseline. The patient attendant began 12-hour daily support, focusing on familiarizing themselves with the patient’s routine, preferences, and communication needs. Hearing aids were placed in the morning, though the patient expressed discomfort and uncertainty about their use.
The nurse completed the second visit, reviewing blood pressure trends, verifying medication adherence (confirmed by attendant), and conducting the first formal fall risk reassessment. The patient’s medication for vertigo was being taken as prescribed. The nurse began the first structured education session with the daughter-in-law on hearing aid maintenance and communication techniques.
By the end of the first week, a structured daily routine had been established. The attendant’s presence provided a safety net that allowed the patient to attempt more movement. The physiotherapist had completed baseline assessments and designed a progressive exercise plan. No falls were reported during this period.
The second week marked the first clearly observable functional improvements. The patient’s tolerance for vestibular exercises increased, and the family began noticing meaningful changes in communication. These early gains are important for building patient motivation and family confidence in the home care process.
By the end of the first month, the improvements had transitioned from subjective observations to measurable functional gains. The patient’s balance had improved sufficiently to allow more challenging exercises, and her hearing aid use had become more consistent. The fall risk reassessment showed a positive trend, though the patient remained in a risk category that required continued supervision.
The seventh week represented a consolidation phase where earlier gains became more reliable and the patient began testing her improved abilities in more challenging situations. The psychological dimension of recovery — confidence and fear reduction — became as important as the physical rehabilitation.
At the 10-week mark, a comprehensive outcome assessment was conducted by the nursing and physiotherapy teams, with input from the attendant and family. The assessment evaluated progress against the defined short-term and long-term goals and determined the appropriate transition plan.
The following tables document the functional progression observed during the 10-week home healthcare period. These assessments were conducted by the physiotherapy and nursing teams using clinical observation and standardized functional evaluation criteria. It is important to note that these represent documented clinical observations rather than scores from a single standardized assessment tool.
| Functional Domain | At Discharge (Baseline) | Week 4 | Week 10 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Indoor Mobility | Dependent — Walker + Supervision | Assisted — Walker + Standby | Assisted — Walker + Minimal Cuing |
| Outdoor Mobility | Fully Dependent | Dependent — Not Attempted | Assisted — Walker + Attendant |
| Static Balance | Poor — Unable tandem stance | Improving — Brief tandem hold | Improved — Sustained with standby |
| Transfer Ability | Dependent — Physical assist | Assisted — Verbal cuing | Improved — Minimal cuing |
| Hearing Aid Compliance | Poor — Intermittent, reluctant | Improving — 6–7 hrs/day | Good — 8+ hrs/day, self-initiated |
| Communication (Quiet Setting) | Poor — Frequent repetition needed | Improving — Less repetition | Improved — Follows conversation |
| Communication (Noisy Setting) | Very Poor — Unable to follow | Poor — Significant difficulty | Improving — Some difficulty remains |
| Social Participation | Withdrawn — Remained in room | Improving — Joined family in living area | Improved — Active in family activities |
| Fall Risk Level | High | Moderate-High | Moderate |
| Falls During Period | Zero falls reported during the entire 10-week period | ||
| Activity | Discharge Status | Week 10 Status | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Feeding | Independent | Independent | — No change |
| Grooming | Independent | Independent | — No change |
| Personal Decision-Making | Independent | Independent | — No change |
| Bathing | Required Assistance | Required Assistance (shower chair) | ↑ Safer with equipment |
| Meal Preparation | Required Assistance | Required Assistance | — No change |
| Communication (Medical) | Required Assistance | Improved with hearing aids | ↑ Meaningful improvement |
| Outdoor Mobility | Dependent | Assisted (walker + attendant) | ↑ Significant improvement |
| Shopping | Dependent | Dependent | — No change |
| Hospital Visits | Dependent | Assisted (improved transfer ability) | ↑ Partial improvement |
The functional progression documented above reflects realistic, clinically credible improvements for a 73-year-old patient with multiple comorbidities. It is important to note that the patient did not achieve full independence in all domains — and this was never the expected outcome. The goals were to improve balance, prevent falls, support hearing aid adaptation, enhance communication, and reduce social withdrawal. In each of these areas, meaningful progress was observed. The absence of falls over 10 weeks in a patient who was classified as high risk at discharge is itself a significant clinical outcome. The improvement from “fully dependent” to “assisted” in outdoor mobility, and the transition from “withdrawn” to “active in family activities” in social participation, represent clinically meaningful changes that directly affect the patient’s quality of life. This realistic framing is essential — as discussed in our article on why ageing is predictable but decline is not.
A structured family education program was delivered across multiple nursing visits and reinforced by the physiotherapist and attendant. The education targeted the son and daughter-in-law as primary caregivers, equipping them with the knowledge and skills needed to sustain the patient’s progress beyond the formal home care period. Family education is a critical but often underappreciated component of home healthcare — without it, gains achieved during professional care can erode rapidly after services end. This principle is central to effective elderly care management.
The 10-week home healthcare period concluded with a comprehensive outcome review. The results were assessed across multiple domains, reflecting the multidimensional nature of the patient’s condition and the corresponding multidisciplinary approach to her care.
It is important to acknowledge that not all domains showed complete resolution. A transparent account of remaining challenges is essential for clinical credibility and for guiding ongoing care:
At the conclusion of the 10-week program, the following recommendations were provided to the family for ongoing management:
Severe hearing loss in older adults is not merely an auditory deficit — it is a condition that affects communication, balance, emotional wellbeing, social participation, and functional independence. When combined with dizziness or vertigo, the risk of falls increases substantially, creating a cascade of potential adverse outcomes including injury, hospitalization, loss of confidence, and progressive decline.
This case demonstrates that a multidisciplinary home healthcare approach — integrating nursing for medical monitoring and education, physiotherapy for vestibular rehabilitation and balance training, attendant care for daily safety and support, and structured family education for sustainable caregiving — can address the multiple dimensions of this complex clinical presentation. The approach improved communication, mobility, confidence, and overall quality of life while achieving the critical safety objective of zero falls during the rehabilitation period.
The case also illustrates several principles that are broadly applicable to home nursing for elderly patients with multiple chronic conditions: the importance of addressing the whole patient rather than a single diagnosis, the value of delivering rehabilitation in the actual home environment, the necessity of family education as a core component of care, and the value of setting realistic, measurable goals that reflect the patient’s actual clinical potential rather than an idealized recovery.
If you or an elderly family member with hearing loss or vertigo experiences any of the following, seek emergency medical evaluation immediately:
In Patna, contact emergency medical services or visit the nearest hospital emergency department immediately if any of these symptoms occur.
Yes. Research has demonstrated a significant association between hearing loss and increased fall risk in older adults. The inner ear houses both the cochlea (for hearing) and the vestibular system (for balance). When sensorineural hearing loss is present, vestibular function may also be compromised. Additionally, hearing loss reduces spatial awareness of the environment, increases cognitive load during ambulation, and limits the ability to detect hazards through sound cues. In patients with additional conditions like vertigo, osteoarthritis, or vitamin D deficiency, the fall risk multiplies substantially.
Vestibular rehabilitation is a specialized form of physiotherapy that uses structured exercises to promote central nervous system compensation for vestibular dysfunction. It includes gaze stabilization exercises, balance training on different surfaces, habituation exercises for motion-provoked dizziness, and walking training with head turns. When performed consistently at home under professional supervision, it helps the brain adapt to altered vestibular input, reducing dizziness episodes, improving balance, and lowering fall risk. Home-based delivery allows exercises to be practiced in the actual environment where falls are most likely to occur.
After the acute phase was stabilized during the 7-day hospital stay, the patient’s primary needs were rehabilitation-based: balance training, hearing aid adaptation, caregiver education, and fall prevention. These interventions are best delivered in the patient’s actual living environment where real-world fall hazards exist. Home healthcare allows for personalized safety modifications, consistent daily physiotherapy, and family involvement in care — all of which are difficult to replicate during prolonged hospitalization. Additionally, hospital stays in elderly patients carry independent risks including delirium, hospital-acquired infections, and deconditioning.
Hearing aids restore auditory environmental awareness, allowing patients to detect potential hazards such as approaching people, vehicles, or objects falling. They reduce the cognitive load required to process degraded sound signals, freeing cognitive resources for balance and spatial navigation. Hearing aids also improve communication, enabling patients to respond to verbal warnings. Consistent use has been associated with improved postural stability and reduced fall incidence in community-dwelling older adults.
Key modifications include installing grab bars in bathrooms and along corridors, using non-slip floor mats particularly in wet areas, placing a shower chair to eliminate standing during bathing, ensuring adequate lighting in all rooms and pathways, removing loose rugs and clutter, keeping commonly used items within easy reach, using contrasting colors for steps and edges to improve visual depth perception, and ensuring the home environment is quiet during conversations to reduce auditory confusion.
Family members should speak clearly and at a moderate pace while facing the person directly so lip-reading cues are available. Reduce background noise by turning off televisions or fans during important conversations. Use simple, short sentences and rephrase rather than repeat if not understood. Ensure the hearing aids are properly fitted and functioning before starting conversation. Use visual gestures and written notes when necessary. Avoid speaking from another room or while the person is engaged in another activity that requires attention.
Vitamin D deficiency is an established risk factor for falls in older adults. Vitamin D is essential for muscle function, and deficiency leads to proximal muscle weakness, reduced grip strength, and slower gait speed. It also impairs bone mineralization, meaning that if a fall does occur, the risk of fracture is higher. Correction of vitamin D deficiency through supplementation, combined with weight-bearing exercises, has been shown to reduce fall incidence in deficient elderly patients.
In elderly patients, vestibular rehabilitation typically begins to show measurable improvement in balance and reduction in dizziness within 2 to 4 weeks of consistent daily exercises. Significant functional gains, such as improved walking confidence and reduced fall frequency, are commonly observed between 6 to 12 weeks. However, the timeline varies based on the severity of vestibular dysfunction, presence of comorbidities like osteoarthritis or neuropathy, patient adherence to the exercise program, and whether central compensation mechanisms are intact.
Emergency evaluation is warranted if vertigo is accompanied by sudden severe headache, sudden hearing loss, double vision or vision loss, difficulty speaking or swallowing, facial drooping or weakness on one side of the body, loss of consciousness, chest pain or palpitations, high blood pressure readings, persistent vomiting leading to dehydration, or if the vertigo follows a head injury. These symptoms may indicate stroke, brain hemorrhage, acute vestibular syndrome with central origin, or cardiac causes requiring immediate intervention.
For balance and fall prevention rehabilitation, home-based physiotherapy offers distinct advantages. Exercises can be practiced in the exact environment where falls are most likely to occur, allowing the therapist to identify and address specific environmental hazards. Transfer training can be customized to the patient’s actual furniture and bathroom layout. Patients who have mobility limitations, transportation difficulties, or anxiety about leaving home are more likely to adhere to a home-based program. Studies have shown comparable or superior outcomes for home-based balance training in elderly patients compared to clinic-based programs, particularly when the goal is fall prevention in the domestic setting.
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