Families typically come to us after seeing patterns like:
- Rapid weight decline without a corresponding nutrition plan adjustment
- Dry mouth, confusion, dizziness, lethargy, or repeated complaints of thirst
- UTIs or dehydration-related lab abnormalities that appear after changes in care routines
- Pressure injuries or slow wound healing that seem to worsen over days or weeks
- Inconsistent meal assistance (e.g., “encouraged” but not actually fed, repositioned, or monitored)
- Swallowing concerns not met with the right diet texture, supervision, or escalation
Rochester Hills residents are often balancing work, school schedules, and travel time—so when you’re visiting between shifts or after commuting, you may notice changes that staff later minimize. The key is capturing what you observed while the timeline is still fresh.


