Most care plans look like they’re working until they aren’t.
The reasons are quiet. A pattern of small declines that nobody quite noticed because they happened gradually. A caregiver burnout that was building for months but only surfaced as illness or resignation. A financial trajectory that looked sustainable until it wasn’t. A medication regimen that was producing side effects nobody connected to it. None of these arrive with a flag. They arrive as accumulated results that, in retrospect, were visible if anyone had been tracking.
This post is about tracking. What to measure to actually know whether a care plan is working, how to capture the information without burying the family in spreadsheets, and how to use what you capture to adjust the plan before problems become crises.
For the broader plan-review framework, see Checklist for Reviewing a Senior Care Plan.
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