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Answers before the pressure rises

Questions to ask before a crisis forces rushed decisions

Most families do not regret asking too early. They regret waiting until a hospital stay, a fall, a medication problem, or a financial mess forces the whole conversation into one stressful week. The best time to ask important questions is while there is still enough calm to think clearly.

You do not need to ask everything in one sitting. Work through the questions that matter most right now, write down what you learn, and come back to the rest later.

Focus on what will matter under pressure

  • Who are the doctors and what care is active right now?
  • What medications are being taken, and why?
  • Where are the key documents and account details?
  • Who should be called in an emergency?
  • What decisions would be hardest to make with no preparation?

The most important question groups

Medical questions

What health details should already be written down?

  • Who is the primary doctor, and who are the specialists?
  • What diagnoses, concerns, or recent symptoms matter most?
  • What medications, supplements, and allergies need to be known fast?
  • What hospital or health system is usually used?
  • What follow-up care or testing is currently pending?
Daily life questions

Where is extra help already needed?

  • What tasks feel harder than they used to?
  • Is driving still safe and comfortable?
  • Who helps with meals, errands, transportation, or the home?
  • Is there a recent fall history or mobility change?
  • What is becoming stressful, frustrating, or easy to forget?
Money and paperwork

What needs to be easier to find?

  • Where are the insurance cards, policies, and ID documents?
  • What bills, income sources, and recurring payments are in place?
  • Where are the will, trust, or power of attorney documents?
  • Who knows how to access the right accounts if something changes?
  • What paperwork becomes a problem every time it is needed?
Emergency planning

What would you need in one hour if something happened today?

  • Emergency contacts and family phone numbers
  • Medication list and pharmacy details
  • Doctor names and recent medical history
  • Insurance information
  • Transportation plan and support roles

Questions that help avoid family confusion later

  • Who is the main point person when something changes?
  • Who can help with appointments, paperwork, or transportation?
  • Who needs updates, and how should those updates be shared?
  • What decisions should not be made without talking first?
  • What has already caused tension that should be handled more clearly now?

What to do with the answers

Do not leave important details in texts, sticky notes, voicemail, memory, and scattered folders. Put the information in one place where you can find it quickly when you need it.

Put medical details and money questions somewhere you can actually use them

The Boomer Buddy Guide helps with appointments, care notes, medications, and communication. The Boomer Money Guide helps you think through the financial side of planning, documents, benefits, and decisions that families often put off too long.