Is an elderly person forgetting to take their medication?
Forgetting medication in older adults can lead to worsening chronic conditions, destabilization of overall health, and an increased risk of acute complications. It most often occurs due to cognitive decline, complex treatment regimens, and disrupted daily routines, and is often not noticed by families in time.
Why do older people forget to take their medication?
Forgetting to take medication is most often unintentional and results from multiple overlapping factors. With age, there is a natural decline in short-term memory, which makes it harder to keep track of multiple daily doses. In individuals taking several medications at the same time, the risk of errors increases further. An additional factor is a disrupted daily routine, where medication is no longer tied to clear patterns such as meals or bedtime.
What happens if medications are not taken regularly?
Skipping medication for several days in older adults is not a “neutral omission,” but a disruption of the stability that medicines maintain in the body. In chronic conditions such as hypertension, diabetes, or cardiovascular disease, therapy is not only symptom-based but continuously regulates physiological processes. When this control is interrupted, the body often does not respond with immediate, dramatic changes, but rather with a gradual loss of balance over time.
One of the first effects may be blood pressure instability. In individuals taking antihypertensive medication, missed doses can lead to fluctuations that are not immediately felt as symptoms, but increase the risk of dizziness, weakness, and, in more severe cases, cardiovascular complications. A similar mechanism applies to blood glucose regulation, where irregular medication use can result in hyperglycemia or long-term deterioration of diabetes control.
Alongside metabolic changes, there is also a general decline in the body’s overall stability. Older adults may present with non-specific symptoms such as fatigue, reduced orientation, poor coordination, or a decline in overall functioning, which families often do not immediately associate with medication adherence.
In some cases, the consequences can be much faster and more severe. In individuals with multiple chronic conditions, discontinuation of therapy may lead to acute episodes requiring urgent medical intervention, including hospitalization. What further complicates the situation is that such deteriorations often develop “in the background,” without a clear moment when the problem becomes obvious.
In other words, irregular medication use does not always cause an immediate crisis, but often leads to a silent progression toward health destabilization, which only becomes apparent when intervention is already required.
Improving adherence to therapy in chronic diseases has a greater impact on population health than any improvement in specific medical interventions. WHO
Signs that families often fail to notice
Early signs of deterioration in older adults living alone are often subtle and easily attributed to “normal aging.” The problem is that they develop gradually, so families do not associate them with possible health or cognitive changes.
The most common subtle signs include:
- blaga konfuzija ili sporije razmišljanje u svakodnevnim razgovorima
- repeating the same questions or forgetting recent events
- reduced energy levels and spending more time at rest
- avoiding activities that were previously part of their routine
- irregularity in taking medication or in carrying out daily responsibilities
- changes in diet, personal hygiene, or overall life organization
- withdrawal from communication or reduced initiative
These signs on their own often don’t appear alarming, but when they recur or persist over time, they may indicate deeper changes in health and functional status.
Why traditional solutions are not enough
Traditional solutions for monitoring medication adherence and the safety of older adults most often include reminders, pill organizers, and occasional contact with family. While they can be helpful for basic organization, their main limitation is that they do not provide continuous and objective insight into the real condition and behavior of a person living alone.
Mobile reminders or alarms rely on the assumption that a person will be able to recognize and respond correctly to a signal at all times. In older adults—especially those with early cognitive changes or complex treatment regimens—the issue is not only forgetting, but also uncertainty about whether the medication was taken at all.
Pill organizers help structure dosing schedules, but they do not provide information on whether the therapy was actually followed. Similarly, occasional phone calls rely on subjective responses and momentary impressions, without the ability to verify real continuity.
An additional issue with traditional approaches is the fragmentation of information. Medication adherence, health status, and daily functioning are observed separately, which makes it harder to recognize early patterns of change that may indicate deterioration.
That’s exactly why digital support solutions are increasingly being used, such as Silver Monitor, which brings key information together in one place. The system provides insight into vital parameters such as blood pressure, heart rate, oxygen saturation (SpO₂), and body temperature, along with monitoring daily activity and movement patterns, as well as tracking therapy and diagnoses.
Na taj način obitelj dobiva kontinuitet u praćenju, umjesto povremenih i nepovezanih informacija, što omogućuje ranije prepoznavanje odstupanja od uobičajenog obrasca ponašanja i zdravstvenog stanja.
Traditional solutions for elderly care, such as reminders and pill organisers, are often not sufficient because they do not provide continuous insight into a person’s actual condition and behaviour. As a result, changes in health and routine are often recognised too late.
Upravo zato je važan sustavni nadzor, a ne samo podsjećanje.
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Frequently asked questions
What are the early signs that an older person’s health is deteriorating?
Early signs are often not dramatic, which is why their importance is easily overlooked. These include changes in memory, confusion in everyday conversations, reduced energy, withdrawal from activities, and changes in routine. When these signs start to repeat, they may indicate a gradual deterioration in health or cognitive status.
How can a family know that medication is not being taken regularly?
The most common indicators are unexplained worsening of chronic diseases, fluctuations in blood pressure or glucose levels, changes in behavior, and a general decline in functional ability. The problem is that older adults often firmly state that they are taking their medication, so without additional insight it is difficult to confirm the actual situation.
Why is it difficult to notice changes in older adults living alone in time?
Changes usually develop gradually, between contacts with family. Since there is no continuous insight into daily habits, small changes in behavior or health are often not connected into a broader picture until a more pronounced deterioration occurs.
What are the most common risks if medications are not taken regularly?
Irregular medication use can lead to destabilization of chronic diseases such as hypertension and diabetes, and increase the risk of acute health episodes. In more vulnerable individuals, the consequences can be faster and more severe.
Can technology help in monitoring older adults?
Yes, digital solutions can help monitor daily routines, health parameters, and changes in behaviour over time. This provides families with better insight into an older person’s condition and enables earlier detection of deviations from their usual pattern.
When is it time to seek additional help?
Additional help becomes necessary when there are repeated lapses in medication adherence, changes in behaviour, or signs that the person is no longer functioning independently as before. At that point, it is important not to wait for further deterioration but to act earlier.
Conclusion
Forgetting medication and gradual changes in the daily functioning of older adults represent an important clinical and organizational challenge in long-term care. The scientific literature and guidelines from health organizations emphasize that non-adherence to therapy can significantly increase the risk of worsening chronic diseases and hospitalizations, especially in individuals living alone or with multiple diagnoses. In practice, the main issue is not an isolated lapse, but the lack of continuous insight into behavioral patterns and health status. That is why modern approaches to care increasingly emphasize the importance of monitoring changes over time, in order to detect deviations earlier, before more serious complications develop.