Vertigo and Dizziness Support for Seniors

Dizziness may feel like lightheadedness, wooziness, or disorientation. Vertigo is the feeling that you or the room is spinning. Either symptom can increase fall risk and deserves careful review in older adults.

All Seniors Foundation helps older adults and families organize practical next steps. This page is educational, not a diagnosis or a substitute for a clinician. It is designed to help you understand common symptoms, prepare better questions, and connect with appropriate care resources in Los Angeles.

Common symptoms to review

Symptoms matter most when they are specific. Before a visit, write down when symptoms started, what makes them better or worse, and how they affect daily routines.

  • Spinning, tilting, floating, or feeling off balance.
  • Lightheadedness when standing or changing position.
  • Nausea, hearing changes, ringing in the ears, or headache.
  • Falls, near-falls, or new fear of walking alone.

What a clinician may ask about

A careful conversation can help separate urgent warning signs from longer-term support needs. Seniors should bring a medication list, recent test results when available, and notes about falls, pain, weakness, or functional changes.

  • When dizziness happens and how long it lasts.
  • Medication changes, hydration, blood pressure concerns, and heart symptoms.
  • Hearing changes, ear symptoms, headache, vision changes, or neurologic symptoms.
  • Recent falls, infection, dehydration, or changes in walking.

Support options for seniors and families

Support often includes more than one step. Depending on the concern, a care plan may involve medical evaluation, therapy, home safety, mobility support, medication review, transportation, or caregiver help.

  • Appointment preparation with symptom timing and medication lists.
  • Fall-risk and home-safety review while symptoms are being evaluated.
  • Transportation coordination when driving is unsafe.
  • Support following clinician recommendations and therapy referrals.

Home safety and daily routine planning

Many senior condition concerns become more serious when pain, weakness, numbness, dizziness, or stiffness changes how someone moves around the home. Simple preparation can reduce avoidable stress: clear walkways, keep important items within reach, use good lighting, wear supportive footwear, and ask about bathroom safety if bathing or transfers feel uncertain.

Families should also watch for changes in sleep, appetite, mood, activity level, and confidence. A senior who stops walking, avoids appointments, skips meals, or stops bathing because of symptoms may need more support than the symptom name alone suggests.

When to ask for medical help

Call emergency services for dizziness with chest pain, trouble speaking, new weakness, severe headache, fainting, or sudden vision changes.

If symptoms are new, worsening, or affecting safety, call a licensed medical professional. If symptoms feel sudden or severe, use emergency services instead of waiting for a routine appointment.

How All Seniors Foundation can help

Our team can help seniors and families organize questions, coordinate care resources, review home-support needs, and prepare for follow-up. We focus on practical support: transportation questions, care navigation, mobility concerns, home safety, therapy coordination, and making sure the next step is clear.

Call All Seniors Foundation to ask about available support. We can help you think through what is happening, what information to gather, and which services may fit the situation.

Trusted resource

For additional medical background, review MedlinePlus dizziness and vertigo information.

Frequently asked questions

Does vertigo and dizziness support for seniors always need specialist care?

Not always. Many concerns start with primary care, especially when symptoms are mild or gradual. Specialist care may be recommended when symptoms are severe, persistent, complex, or affecting safety.

What should I write down before calling?

Write down when symptoms started, where they are located, what makes them better or worse, recent falls or injuries, current medications, and which daily activities are harder now.

Can home support help while medical evaluation is pending?

Yes. Home support can help reduce stress around bathing, dressing, meals, transportation, mobility, and appointment follow-up while the medical team evaluates symptoms and next steps.

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Senior doctor reviewing dizziness and balance concerns during an online care consultation.
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