Follow-up visits, therapy, labs, imaging, and the timing windows that matter in the first days and weeks after discharge.
Services
Recovery support that starts with clear next steps.
Bonegevity helps older adults, adult children, caregivers, and hospital teams organize what needs to happen after a hospital stay and keep the recovery plan moving.
What We Help With
Bonegevity keeps the recovery details that families are often left to track on their own.
These are the details that often get scattered across discharge papers, voicemail, patient portals, and memory.
What came in, what still needs to be requested, and whether outside records or paperwork are still pending.
Bone density testing, labs, osteoporosis treatment questions, and the longer transition from fracture recovery into prevention.
Visual Support Bands
Different moments in recovery call for different kinds of support.
This section gives the site a more visual rhythm while also helping families understand the shape of the support model.
Useful when the first two weeks feel packed with timing-sensitive instructions, calls, and follow-up questions.
Useful when recovery keeps unfolding over time and the family still needs a central thread to follow.
Useful when one person is carrying too much of the communication, scheduling, and loose-end management alone.
Why Bonegevity
We are built for the days after discharge, when the plan is on paper but still hard to carry out.
The discharge summary is only the beginning. Recovery depends on whether the patient understands the plan, the family can act on it, and the follow-up actually happens.
Follow-up visits, therapy, equipment, medication questions, bone health workup, and red-flag symptoms are surfaced clearly.
We pay close attention to osteoporosis follow-up, early recovery timing, and the longer-running care details that can fall through the cracks after the first few weeks.
Families do not need another vague portal. They need clarity, steady follow-through, and someone keeping track of what still has to happen.
How It Works
From discharge paperwork to a guided recovery plan, with help that can continue as long as it is needed.
Bonegevity reviews the information, helps clarify the next steps, and stays involved when a family needs more support after the first post-discharge push.
A patient, caregiver, or hospital partner fills out the request form with the basics they know.
We review the discharge information, identify what matters most, and surface the next steps that need attention.
Appointments, outreach, timing-sensitive follow-up, and bone health opportunities are surfaced for immediate action.
Bonegevity follows up, helps coordinate the next move, and keeps recovery from stalling out.
Good Times To Reach Out
Families usually contact Bonegevity when they are trying to do the right thing but the plan still feels foggy.
These are common moments when extra support can make recovery feel safer and more manageable.
The patient is home, everyone is tired, and there are still unanswered questions about next steps.
Appointments, therapy, paperwork, or testing are not lined up yet and no one is sure who should move first.
An adult child, spouse, or caregiver is trying to coordinate everything and needs backup.
Who We Help
Three entry points. One coordinated recovery process.
However someone finds us, the goal is the same: safer follow-through after discharge and a clearer path to recovery.
People recovering after fracture, hospitalization, rehab, or a complex discharge who need the next steps organized clearly.
Family members trying to make sense of discharge paperwork, medications, therapy orders, and who needs to be called first.
Case managers and discharge planners who want stronger outpatient follow-through and less avoidable post-discharge confusion.
Support Bands
Bonegevity can help in more than one chapter of recovery.
Some families need fast post-hospital help. Others need a longer runway. Others want a more hands-on advocate coordinating the whole picture.
For the first stretch after discharge when timing, communication, and immediate follow-up matter most.
For patients whose recovery keeps spilling into longer-running coordination and follow-through.
For families who want a more direct advocate helping manage appointments, communication, and loose ends.