What to expect when a Charlotte-area hospital gives a family 24-72 hours to arrange senior care after a fall, stroke, or surgery.
By Charlotte Senior Advisor Care Team — Hospital & Veteran Transitions Team · March 12, 2026
When a senior is hospitalized at an Atrium Health facility (Carolinas Medical Center in Uptown, Atrium Health Pineville, University City, Mercy, Cabarrus in Concord, or Union in Monroe), a Novant Health hospital (Presbyterian Medical Center, Huntersville, Matthews, or Mint Hill), CaroMont Regional Medical Center in Gastonia, or Lake Norman Regional Medical Center in Mooresville, the hospital's discharge planner or case manager typically opens a conversation about post-hospital care within the first day or two of admission — well before the family feels ready. That's normal. Hospitals are required to plan for a safe discharge, and Medicare's rules push toward shorter inpatient stays, especially after common triggers like a fall, stroke, or joint replacement.
Ask the discharge planner directly what level of care they're recommending — home with services, a short-term rehab stay at a nursing facility, or a move to an Adult Care Home or Family Care Home — and get that recommendation in writing. Families are allowed to ask questions, request more time when medically appropriate, and choose their own post-acute provider rather than simply accepting the hospital's first suggested facility.
If the hospital team and family agree that a return home isn't safe, a direct move into a licensed Adult Care Home (DHSR-licensed under 10A NCAC 13F) or Family Care Home (DHSR-licensed under 10A NCAC 13G) is sometimes possible without an interim rehab stay, especially if the underlying medical issue is stable. If dementia safety is the concern, the family will be looking for a community with a Special Care Unit (SCU) designation. Charlotte's hospital systems each work with a rotating set of local placement liaisons, but families are not obligated to use only the facilities a hospital suggests — it's worth getting a second option from a Centralina Area Agency on Aging counselor or your county Department of Social Services if time allows even 24-48 extra hours.
For veterans, the social work teams connected to the Salisbury VA Health Care System and the Charlotte North and South VA Health Care Centers can coordinate directly with a civilian hospital's discharge team when a veteran is being transferred into VA-connected home care or benefits, including Aid & Attendance paperwork that should start as early as possible in the hospital stay rather than after discharge.
Free, online, and no pressure — we answer to families here, not to facilities.