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Overview

About this resource

This Caregiving.com article introduces caregivers to a range of helpful mobility aids and emergency safety products designed to make a senior’s life easier and safer. For families trying to support a loved one’s independence while reducing risk, it serves as a practical primer on the tools available.

On the mobility side, the article covers devices that help a person move safely — canes, walkers, rollators, wheelchairs, and aids for transfers and reaching — and how they support independence and prevent falls. On the safety side, it highlights emergency devices such as personal emergency response systems (medical alert buttons), fall-detection technology, and other tools that summon help quickly when something goes wrong. By explaining what’s available and what each device does, the article helps caregivers match the right tools to a loved one’s specific needs.

This resource matters because the right equipment can dramatically improve both safety and quality of life, yet many caregivers don’t know what exists or how to choose. A simple emergency response button, for instance, can mean the difference between a quick rescue and hours alone after a fall. For caregivers looking to equip a loved one’s home and daily life for safety and independence, this article is a useful guide. It is freely available on Caregiving.com.

Key Takeaways

What you'll get from this resource

  • A Caregiving.com primer on mobility aids and emergency safety devices for seniors.
  • Covers canes, walkers, rollators, wheelchairs, and transfer/reaching aids.
  • Highlights emergency response systems and fall-detection technology that summon help fast.
  • Freely available on Caregiving.com.
Questions

Frequently asked questions

Mobility aids like canes, walkers, rollators, and wheelchairs, plus emergency safety devices such as medical alert buttons and fall-detection technology.

They let a loved one summon help quickly after a fall or emergency, which can be the difference between a fast rescue and hours alone.

The article is freely available on Caregiving.com.

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