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Hip Fracture Rehabilitation at Home: A 78-Year-Old Patient’s Recovery Journey | AtHomeCare Greater Noida

Recovering from a Hip Fracture at Home: A 78-Year-Old Patient’s 14-Week Rehabilitation Journey

How structured home nursing, physiotherapy, occupational therapy, and caregiver education helped a retired school teacher from Sector Delta I, Greater Noida, regain mobility and independence after surgical repair of a left intertrochanteric hip fracture.

Age
78 Years
Gender
Female
Location
Greater Noida
Primary Condition
Left Hip Fracture
Surgery
ORIF with PFN
Duration of Care
14 Weeks
Outcome
Improved Mobility

Patient Background

Mrs. Savitri Mishra is a 78-year-old retired school teacher living with her elder son, daughter-in-law, and grandson in Sector Delta I, Greater Noida, Uttar Pradesh. She has been widowed for several years and was managing most of her daily activities independently before this incident.

Before the fall, she could walk around her home without assistance, though she had noticed gradual difficulty climbing stairs over the past year, which she attributed to knee pain from osteoarthritis. She was not using any walking aid at home.

Relevant Medical History
Hypertension, osteoporosis, osteoarthritis of both knees, and vitamin D deficiency. No history of stroke or dementia was documented. These conditions are commonly seen together in elderly women and collectively increase the risk of falls and fragility fractures.

Osteoporosis reduces bone density, making bones fragile. A slip in the bathroom, which might cause only a bruise in a younger person, resulted in a hip fracture in her case. Vitamin D deficiency further weakens bones and also contributes to muscle weakness, increasing fall risk. Her knee osteoarthritis may have altered her gait pattern, reducing her balance reserve.

Her son, aged 50, serves as the primary caregiver, with his wife providing secondary support. Both work during the day, which meant the patient would be alone for several hours without professional supervision if home healthcare was not arranged.

Clinical Diagnosis

The patient sustained a left intertrochanteric femur fracture after slipping on a wet bathroom floor. She experienced immediate severe pain in her left hip and groin, was unable to stand or bear any weight on the left leg, and the affected limb appeared shortened and externally rotated. These are characteristic clinical signs of a proximal femur fracture.

Understanding the Injury

The intertrochanteric region lies between the greater and lesser trochanters of the femur, just below the hip joint. Fractures in this area are common in older adults with osteoporosis. Unlike intracapsular (neck of femur) fractures, intertrochanteric fractures generally have a better blood supply to the bone fragments, which supports healing. Surgical fixation allows early mobilization, which is critical for preventing complications of bed rest in elderly patients.

The diagnosis was confirmed by radiography at the hospital. The patient was transported to the emergency department by ambulance. No neurological deficit was noted. The fracture was classified based on radiographic appearance, and the treating orthopaedic surgeon determined that surgical fixation was the appropriate course of treatment given the patient’s functional level and medical fitness for surgery.

Hospital Treatment

The patient was admitted for 12 days. During this period, the hospital team addressed several clinical priorities simultaneously.

Surgical Procedure

Open Reduction and Internal Fixation (ORIF) using a Proximal Femoral Nail (PFN). The fracture fragments were realigned and stabilized with an intramedullary nail, which provides strong fixation for intertrochanteric fractures and allows early weight-bearing.

DVT Prophylaxis

Deep vein thrombosis prophylaxis was initiated as part of standard postoperative care for hip fracture patients. This is critical because the combination of surgical trauma, immobility, and the hypercoagulable state after fracture significantly increases the risk of blood clots in the lower limbs.

Pain Management

Postoperative pain was managed with prescribed analgesics. Adequate pain control was essential not only for patient comfort but also to enable participation in early physiotherapy, which directly influences recovery outcomes.

Early Physiotherapy

Postoperative physiotherapy was initiated in the hospital. The focus was on bed mobility, safe transfer techniques, and assisted standing within the weight-bearing restrictions advised by the surgeon. Early mobilization reduces the risk of chest infections, pressure sores, and muscle deconditioning.

A nutritional assessment was also conducted during the hospital stay, recognizing that adequate protein and caloric intake are important for wound healing and bone repair in elderly patients. A fall risk assessment was performed to identify factors that contributed to the fall and to plan prevention strategies for after discharge.

Discharge Status
The patient was discharged after 12 days with the surgical wound healing satisfactorily, pain controlled with oral medication, and the ability to perform basic transfers with assistance. The orthopaedic surgeon advised continued rehabilitation at home with progressive weight-bearing as tolerated, and scheduled a follow-up appointment.

Why Home Healthcare Was Needed

The surgery had successfully stabilized the fracture. However, stabilization is only the first part of the recovery. A 78-year-old patient with multiple comorbidities does not simply resume normal activity after leaving the hospital. The discharge assessment clearly showed several areas of concern.

Condition at Discharge
Moderate pain during movement
Reduced hip movement
Unable to stand independently
Generalized weakness
Fear of falling again
Poor walking endurance

The patient was dependent for bathing, dressing her lower body, outdoor mobility, and stair climbing. She required assistance for toileting, meal preparation, and household activities. She remained independent only in feeding, communication, and decision-making.

Returning home without professional support would have meant prolonged bed rest, high risk of wound infection, muscle wasting, joint stiffness, and a second fall. Her son and daughter-in-law, though willing, lacked the training to manage post-surgical hip precautions, recognize complications early, or provide the intensity of rehabilitation needed.

Clinical Reasoning
Home healthcare was chosen because the patient needed coordinated, multidisciplinary rehabilitation in the environment where she would actually live and function. Rehabilitation delivered at home allows therapists to address real-world barriers such as bathroom layout, furniture placement, and floor surfaces, which cannot be replicated in a hospital or outpatient clinic setting. It also avoids the physical and emotional stress of daily hospital visits for an elderly patient in pain.

Home Care Plan by AtHomeCare

A structured, multidisciplinary care plan was developed based on the discharge summary, orthopaedic surgeon’s weight-bearing guidelines, and the initial home assessment. Each discipline had clearly defined roles and frequency.

Home Nursing — Three Visits Per Week

A registered nurse visited three times each week. The nursing role was focused on monitoring for postoperative complications that might not be obvious to the family.

Vital sign monitoring (blood pressure, pulse, temperature, oxygen saturation)
Surgical wound assessment and dressing changes
Pain assessment using a standardized scale
Medication review and compliance check
Monitoring for signs of infection or DVT
Family education on wound care and warning signs

Physiotherapy — Six Sessions Weekly

Physiotherapy formed the most intensive part of the rehabilitation. Six sessions per week were prescribed because the early postoperative period is a critical window for regaining mobility before complications of immobility set in. All exercises were performed within the surgical precautions specified by the treating orthopaedic surgeon.

Bed mobility training (rolling, sitting up)
Transfer training (bed to chair, chair to standing)
Hip range-of-motion exercises within safe limits
Lower limb strengthening (quadriceps, gluteals, hip abductors)
Progressive gait training with walker
Balance and weight-shifting exercises
Stair training (introduced in later weeks)
Fall prevention strategies and confidence building

Occupational Therapy — Three Sessions Weekly

While physiotherapy focused on mobility and strength, occupational therapy addressed the practical skills needed for daily living. The occupational therapist worked on making the patient’s actual daily routines safer and more manageable within her home environment.

Safe bathroom activities using adaptive equipment
Adaptive dressing techniques for lower body
Home safety assessment and recommendations
Energy conservation during daily tasks

Patient Attendant — 12 Hours Daily

A trained patient attendant was present for 12 hours each day. This was essential because the patient’s son and daughter-in-law were at work during daytime hours. The attendant provided continuous supervision and hands-on assistance, ensuring the patient was never left alone during the most vulnerable period of recovery.

Personal hygiene assistance
Safe transfer supervision
Walking assistance and fall prevention
Medication reminders
Meal assistance
Exercise supervision between therapy sessions

The occupational therapist assessed the home and recommended specific modifications. The family implemented these before the patient returned from the hospital. This was a critical step because the bathroom, where the original fall occurred, needed to be made significantly safer.

ModificationPurpose
Hospital BedAdjustable height for safe transfers; elevation for comfort and breathing
WalkerWeight-bearing support during gait training and daily mobility
Raised Toilet SeatReduces hip flexion required, protecting the surgical repair
Grab Bars (Bathroom)Provides stable handhold during sitting, standing, and showering
Anti-slip Bathroom MatsPrevents slipping on wet surfaces, addressing the original cause of the fall
Shower ChairAllows seated bathing, eliminating the need to stand on a wet floor
Handrails (Hallway)Continuous support along movement path inside the home
Improved LightingBetter visibility reduces fall risk, especially at night
WheelchairUsed for longer distances before walking endurance improved
BP Monitor and Pulse OximeterAllowed the family and attendant to track vital signs between nurse visits

Risks Being Monitored

The clinical team maintained active surveillance for the following complications throughout the 14-week care period.

Surgical Wound Infection Falls Deep Vein Thrombosis Delayed Fracture Healing Joint Stiffness Muscle Wasting Pressure Injuries Hospital Readmission

Recovery Timeline

The following timeline documents the patient’s clinical progress through the 14-week home rehabilitation period. Each stage reflects the interaction between the care team’s interventions and the patient’s physiological response.

Days 1 to 7

Initial Home Assessment and Stabilization

The home care team conducted a comprehensive initial assessment. The patient was in moderate pain, anxious about movement, and dependent for all transfers. The nurse assessed the surgical wound, established a baseline for vital signs, and reviewed all medications. The physiotherapist began gentle bed mobility exercises and sitting balance training.

Nursing focus: Wound care, pain monitoring, DVT signs check
PT focus: Bed mobility, sitting balance, ankle pumps for circulation
Family observation: Patient was fearful and reluctant to move
Days 8 to 14

Transfer Training Begins

The patient began practicing transfers from bed to chair with the physiotherapist and attendant. She required hands-on assistance but was able to participate actively. Pain remained moderate but was manageable. The occupational therapist visited for the first time and assessed bathroom safety, confirming that the installed modifications were appropriate.

Nursing focus: Wound healing on track, no signs of infection
PT focus: Sit-to-stand training with walker, static standing balance
Family observation: Son reported feeling more confident assisting with transfers after being taught proper technique
Weeks 3 to 4

First Steps with Walker

Progressive gait training began. The patient took her first supported steps at home using the walker, walking approximately 15 metres with close supervision. Hip range-of-motion exercises continued within surgical precautions. Lower limb strengthening was progressed with resistance exercises. The patient started using the shower chair for bathing with the attendant’s help.

Nursing focus: Surgical wound closing well, medication adjusted per surgeon
PT focus: Gait initiation, weight-bearing progression, hip abductor strengthening
OT focus: Adaptive dressing techniques, energy conservation during bathing
Weeks 5 to 8

Building Walking Endurance

Walking distance increased progressively. The patient was now walking over 100 metres with the walker under supervision. Transfers became smoother and required less physical assistance. Pain had reduced noticeably. The patient began showing interest in doing more activities independently. Balance exercises were intensified. The family was educated on fall prevention during the patient’s increasing mobility.

Nursing focus: Continued monitoring, wound fully closed
PT focus: Endurance training, dynamic balance, outdoor walking practice
Family observation: Daughter-in-law noted the patient was more cheerful and willing to walk
Weeks 9 to 12

Gaining Independence

The patient achieved independence in most indoor transfers and toileting. Stair training was introduced under direct physiotherapy supervision. Walking distance continued to increase. The occupational therapist worked on more complex daily tasks. The patient attendant’s role shifted from hands-on assistance to supervision and safety monitoring. The frequency of nursing visits was reviewed as the wound had fully healed.

PT focus: Stair ascent and descent with handrail, advanced balance, gait normalization
OT focus: Kitchen activities, community mobility preparation
Patient response: Expressed confidence about walking indoors without fear
Weeks 13 to 14

Rehabilitation Milestone

The 14-week home care period concluded with measurable functional improvement. The patient was walking nearly 300 metres with a walker and minimal supervision. She was independent in transfers, toileting, grooming, and most indoor activities. Pain was minimal during daily tasks. The family had developed a clear understanding of safe mobility practices and when to seek medical help.

Clinical status: No wound complications, no DVT, no falls, no hospital readmission
Family feedback: Felt the home care team had given them the knowledge and confidence to support long-term recovery

Clinical Evidence

The following tables summarize the functional data documented during the care period. Values are based on clinical assessments recorded by the care team.

Functional Status: Activities of Daily Living

ActivityAt DischargeAt Week 7At Week 14
FeedingIndependentIndependentIndependent
BathingDependentAssistedAssisted
Dressing (Lower Body)DependentAssistedIndependent
ToiletingAssistedAssistedIndependent
Transfers (Bed to Chair)AssistedSupervisedIndependent
Indoor WalkingDependentWalker + SupervisionWalker + Minimal Supervision
Stair ClimbingDependentDependentAssisted with Handrail
GroomingAssistedIndependentIndependent

Walking Endurance Progression

Time PointWalking DistanceAssistive DeviceLevel of Supervision
At Hospital DischargeNot documentedNot walking independentlyFull assistance
Week 4Approximately 15 metresWalkerClose supervision
Week 8Over 100 metresWalkerSupervision
Week 14Nearly 300 metresWalkerMinimal supervision

Pain and Complication Status

ParameterAt DischargeAt Week 14Status
Pain During MovementModerateMinimalImproved
Surgical WoundHealing, dressings requiredFully healedResolved
Wound InfectionNot presentNot presentNo Complication
DVTNot presentNot presentNo Complication
Falls During Care PeriodNot applicableZeroNo Complication
Hospital ReadmissionNot applicableZeroNo Complication

Home Care Delivery Summary

ServiceFrequencyTotal Sessions (14 Weeks)
Home Nursing3 visits per week42 visits
Physiotherapy6 sessions per week84 sessions
Occupational Therapy3 sessions per week42 sessions
Patient Attendant12 hours daily84 days

Family Education

Educating the family was not a single event but an ongoing process throughout the 14 weeks. The patient care team taught the family skills that would remain relevant long after the formal care period ended.

Safe Transfer Techniques

The son was taught how to assist his mother from bed to chair and back without straining his own back or putting the patient’s hip at risk. Proper body mechanics were demonstrated and practiced under supervision.

Correct Walker Use

The family learned the correct sequence for walking with a walker: advance the walker first, then the operated leg, then the other leg. They were taught to adjust the walker height and ensure rubber tips were intact.

Weight-Bearing Precautions

The orthopaedic surgeon’s specific weight-bearing instructions were explained and reinforced. The family understood why these restrictions existed and what could happen if they were not followed.

Recognizing Warning Signs

The family was educated to recognize signs of wound infection, DVT (leg pain or swelling), and pulmonary embolism (sudden chest pain or breathlessness). They understood these require immediate hospital care.

Critical Warning Signs Taught to the Family
Increasing redness, warmth, swelling, or discharge from the surgical wound. Fever above 38 degrees Celsius. New or worsening leg pain, swelling, or redness in the calf or thigh. Sudden chest pain, difficulty breathing, or coughing up blood. Sudden inability to bear weight on the operated leg. Any of these symptoms require immediate medical attention, regardless of the time of day.

Recovery Outcome at 14 Weeks

At the conclusion of the 14-week home healthcare period, the following outcomes were documented.

Mobility

Walking endurance improved from approximately 15 metres to nearly 300 metres using a walker with minimal supervision. The patient became independent in transfers and most indoor mobility.

Pain

Pain reduced significantly from moderate levels at discharge to minimal pain during daily activities. The patient was able to participate comfortably in physiotherapy sessions.

Complications

No surgical wound infection. No DVT. No pressure injuries. No falls during the entire care period. No hospital readmission. The surgical wound healed without any wound-related complications.

Family Preparedness

The family gained confidence in assisting with mobility, supervising exercises, implementing fall prevention measures, and recognizing when to seek medical help.

ADL Independence Achieved
The patient became independent in transfers, toileting, grooming, dressing her lower body, and most indoor activities. She remained assisted for bathing and stair climbing. She was dependent for outdoor mobility beyond short distances.
Remaining Challenges and Long-Term Considerations

Recovery from a hip fracture at 78 years of age is a gradual process. At 14 weeks, meaningful progress had been made, but full recovery continues beyond this period. The patient still required a walker for safe mobility, and stair climbing needed assistance. Ongoing physiotherapy at a reduced frequency was recommended.

Her underlying osteoporosis and vitamin D deficiency require long-term medical management to reduce the risk of future fractures. Fall prevention must remain a permanent priority. Scheduled orthopaedic follow-up appointments are essential to monitor fracture healing and guide further weight-bearing progression.

Key Clinical Learnings

Rehabilitation Extends Well Beyond Hospital Discharge

The hospital stay addressed the acute surgical need. But the actual recovery, the part that determines whether the patient walks again or remains bedbound, happens at home. A 12-day hospital stay cannot restore the strength, confidence, and functional ability lost from a hip fracture. Structured home rehabilitation over weeks is what bridges the gap between surgical fixation and functional recovery.

Multidisciplinary Coordination Matters

This case involved nursing, physiotherapy, occupational therapy, and a patient attendant working in coordination. Each discipline addressed a different dimension of recovery. The nurse monitored medical safety. The physiotherapist rebuilt mobility and strength. The occupational therapist made daily living achievable. The attendant provided the continuous supervision that the family could not. None of these roles was interchangeable.

Home Safety Modifications Are Not Optional

The patient’s fall occurred in her bathroom. Discharging her to the same bathroom without modifications would have been clinically inappropriate. The grab bars, raised toilet seat, anti-slip mats, and shower chair directly addressed the environmental factors that caused the injury. Home modifications are a medical intervention, not a convenience.

Fear of Falling Is a Real Barrier to Recovery

After a hip fracture, many elderly patients develop an intense fear of falling again. This fear can be more disabling than the physical injury itself, leading to avoidance of movement, further deconditioning, and a self-reinforcing cycle of decline. Addressing this through gradual exposure, balance training, and confidence building is a necessary part of rehabilitation, not a psychological luxury.

Family Education Determines Long-Term Outcomes

Professional home care has a defined duration. The family remains. What the family knows about safe transfers, fall prevention, warning signs, and exercise continuation after the care team withdraws directly influences whether the patient maintains her gains or deteriorates. In this case, the family’s active participation in the education process was a key factor in the positive outcome.

Comorbidities Must Be Addressed Alongside Rehabilitation

Osteoporosis, vitamin D deficiency, and hypertension were not the primary reason for home care, but they influenced every aspect of recovery. Bone health affects fracture healing. Vitamin D affects muscle strength. Blood pressure affects exercise tolerance. Effective geriatric rehabilitation requires attention to the whole patient, not just the fractured bone.

Frequently Asked Questions

How long does it take to recover from a hip fracture at home?
Recovery from a hip fracture typically takes 3 to 6 months. Most patients begin walking with support within 2 to 4 weeks after surgery. Full functional recovery depends on the patient’s age, bone health, comorbidities, and consistency of rehabilitation. In this case, meaningful improvement was seen within 14 weeks, but some limitations remained that may continue to improve with ongoing exercise.
Is home physiotherapy effective after hip fracture surgery?
Yes. Evidence supports home-based physiotherapy as an effective approach for post-hip fracture rehabilitation. Studies show it improves mobility, reduces pain, and lowers the risk of hospital readmission when delivered by qualified physiotherapists. The home environment also allows therapists to address real-world mobility challenges that cannot be replicated in a clinic.
What home modifications are needed after hip fracture surgery?
Common modifications include grab bars in bathrooms, anti-slip mats, raised toilet seats, shower chairs, handrails along hallways, improved lighting, removal of loose rugs, and rearrangement of frequently used items to waist height. The specific modifications should be guided by an occupational therapist’s home safety assessment.
Why is DVT prophylaxis important after hip fracture surgery?
Hip fracture surgery carries a significant risk of deep vein thrombosis due to prolonged immobility, surgical trauma, and hypercoagulable states. DVT can lead to pulmonary embolism, a potentially life-threatening complication. Prophylaxis with anticoagulants and early mobilization is standard postoperative practice.
What are the signs of infection after hip fracture surgery?
Signs include increasing redness, warmth, or swelling around the surgical wound, persistent or worsening pain, pus or discharge from the wound, fever above 38 degrees Celsius, and chills. Any of these signs require immediate medical evaluation by the treating surgeon or at a hospital.
Can a 78-year-old walk independently after hip fracture surgery?
Many older adults can regain the ability to walk with or without an assistive device after hip fracture surgery. However, the outcome depends on pre-surgical fitness, the type of fracture and repair, rehabilitation quality, and family support. Some patients may continue using a walker long term, and that is a valid and safe outcome.
What role does a patient attendant play in hip fracture recovery at home?
A patient attendant provides daily assistance with personal hygiene, safe transfers, walking support, medication reminders, meal assistance, exercise supervision, and position changes. This support is critical for preventing falls and ensuring the patient follows the rehabilitation plan during hours when family members are not available.
How does occupational therapy help after a hip fracture?
Occupational therapy focuses on restoring the ability to perform daily activities safely. After a hip fracture, this includes training in adaptive dressing techniques, safe bathroom use with equipment, energy conservation strategies, home safety assessment, and transfer techniques. It complements physiotherapy by addressing the practical side of daily living.
What is ORIF with PFN for hip fracture?
ORIF stands for Open Reduction and Internal Fixation. PFN stands for Proximal Femoral Nail. This surgical procedure involves realigning the fractured bone fragments and securing them with a metal nail inserted into the femur. It is a common fixation method for intertrochanteric fractures and allows early weight-bearing, which is important for recovery in elderly patients.
How can families prevent falls in elderly patients at home?
Families can prevent falls by installing grab bars and handrails, using anti-slip mats, improving lighting, removing tripping hazards like loose rugs and wires, ensuring proper footwear is worn indoors, supervising mobility during recovery, encouraging prescribed exercises for strength and balance, and scheduling regular vision checks and medication reviews with the doctor.

Medical Authority

Dr. Ekta Fageriya
Case Study Author

Dr. Ekta Fageriya

MBBS

RMC Registration No.
44780
Specialization
Geriatric Medicine
Clinical Experience
7 Years
Treating Doctor
Name
 
Qualification
 
Hospital
 
Medical Registration
 
Clinical Comments
 
Future Recommendations
 

Supporting Clinical Documents

This case study is based on the following clinical documentation. Specific patient identifiers, hospital names, and detailed investigation values have been withheld to protect patient confidentiality.

Hospital Discharge Summary
Surgical details and discharge recommendations
Orthopaedic Surgeon’s Notes
Weight-bearing and follow-up instructions
Radiology Report
Pre and postoperative X-ray findings
Home Care Progress Notes
Nursing, PT, and OT documentation
Medical Disclaimer

This case study is presented for educational purposes only. The patient and all clinical details are fictional, though they are based on realistic clinical scenarios encountered in geriatric home healthcare.

Every patient is unique. Treatment decisions must always be made by qualified healthcare professionals based on individual clinical assessment. The outcomes described in this case study do not guarantee similar results for other patients.

Emergency symptoms, including sudden chest pain, difficulty breathing, signs of infection, or acute worsening of any condition, require immediate hospital care. Home healthcare complements but does not replace emergency medical services.

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