In this article
KIN Rehabilitation & Homecare is a Medical Rehabilitation Center established in 2018 by Dr. Thongchai Chokthanomsap. With six locations across Bangkok, Pattaya, and Salaya, this article helps families understand commonly overlooked nighttime risks and recognize when support from atrained caregivermay improve safety.

1. Why nighttime requires extra attention for older adults
Key point: Nighttime may increase risk because visibility is poorer, people may wake suddenly to use the bathroom, blood pressure can fall when standing, and confusion or medication effects may be harder to detect. The right level of supervision should be based on the person’s actual condition—not fear alone.
Many families provide excellent support during the day, when people are awake and changes are easier to notice. At night, however, an older adult may get up alone, become confused, feel dizzy, or develop new symptoms while everyone else is asleep.
1 in 4
Older adults report a fall each year in large population data.
Serious
Falls can cause hip fractures, head injuries, loss of independence, and hospitalization.
Common
Nighttime urination becomes more common with age and creates repeated exposure to fall hazards.
Higher risk
Poor sleep, sedating medicines, and cognitive impairment can worsen balance or nighttime confusion.
Low light, slower reactions, reduced balance, orthostatic blood-pressure changes, and nighttime bathroom trips can combine to increase risk. This does not mean every older adult needs overnight staff, but it does mean families should assess the home, medical conditions, medicines, and ability to call for help.
2. Six important risks that may occur at night
Key point: Common concerns include bathroom falls, orthostatic hypotension, stroke symptoms during sleep, acute delirium or dementia-related sundowning, hypoglycemia in people using glucose-lowering medicines, and adverse effects from medicines. A caregiver can support observation and escalation, but cannot guarantee that every event will be prevented.
Bathroom falls at night
Waking to urinate is common in later life. Walking while drowsy, in low light, or immediately after standing can increase the chance of dizziness and loss of balance. Risk is higher when there is muscle weakness, poor vision, neuropathy, unsafe flooring, or medicines that lower blood pressure or cause sedation.
Why a fall can have major consequences
Hip fractures and head injuries can lead to surgery, immobility, pneumonia, pressure injuries, loss of function, and prolonged rehabilitation. Any fall involving a head impact, severe pain, inability to stand, or new confusion needs urgent medical assessment.
Orthostatic hypotension — dizziness or faintness after standing
Orthostatic hypotension is a drop in blood pressure after moving from lying to sitting or standing. It is more common with dehydration, illness, autonomic disorders, and some blood-pressure, diuretic, heart, or sedating medicines. The person may feel light-headed, have blurred vision, become weak, or fall.
Signs to watch for
Repeated dizziness when standing, near-fainting, blurred vision, needing to hold furniture, or unexplained falls should be reported for clinical assessment. A caregiver can help the person sit up slowly, pause before standing, and follow the care plan, but medicine changes must be made by a prescriber.
Stroke symptoms during sleep — act immediately
Stroke can occur during sleep or be discovered on waking. Intravenous thrombolysis is usually time-limited, while selected patients with wake-up or later-presenting stroke may still qualify for treatment based on advanced imaging; mechanical thrombectomy may benefit selected patients for up to 24 hours. The rule for families is simple: note when the person was last known well and call emergency services immediately.
Stroke warning signs requiring emergency care (FAST)
F — Face: one side droops or the smile is uneven | A — Arm: sudden weakness or numbness on one side | S — Speech: slurred, confused, or unable to speak | T — Time: call 1669 immediately; do not wait until morning
Delirium and sundowning are not the same
Delirium is a sudden change in attention, thinking, or behavior and may signal infection, medication effects, dehydration, low oxygen, metabolic problems, or another acute illness; it requires prompt medical assessment. Sundowning describes worsening confusion or agitation later in the day in some people living with dementia. Both can increase wandering and fall risk, but they should not be treated as the same condition.
Why nighttime changes can be difficult for families
A confused older adult may be physically able to get out of bed while being unable to judge danger or recognize the environment. Calm redirection, adequate lighting, familiar routines, and prompt assessment of sudden changes are safer than arguing, restraining without a plan, or assuming the behavior is “just dementia.”
Nocturnal hypoglycemia in people with diabetes
Hypoglycemia may occur during sleep, particularly in people using insulin or medicines that can lower glucose. Signs may include sweating, restlessness, nightmares, palpitations, unusual morning confusion, seizures, or reduced consciousness. Risk and monitoring needs vary greatly, so the diabetes team should provide an individualized prevention and treatment plan.
What the overnight care plan should include
The plan should state who needs glucose checks, when to check, what fast-acting carbohydrate or glucagon to use, and when to call emergency services. An unconscious or unsafe-to-swallow person must not be given food or drink by mouth; call 1669 and follow the prescribed emergency plan.
Medicines that may contribute to nighttime falls or confusion
Some medicines—such as sedatives, certain pain medicines, blood-pressure medicines, diuretics, and medicines with anticholinergic effects—may contribute to drowsiness, low blood pressure, frequent urination, or confusion. The effect depends on the medicine, dose, timing, kidney function, and the individual; medicines should be reviewed by a doctor or pharmacist rather than adjusted by a caregiver.
Skills needed for safe nighttime support
Caregivers should understand the written care plan, assist with safe transfers and toileting, observe and record changes, measure vital signs only within their training and delegated plan, and know when to contact the supervising nurse or emergency services. NA and PN staff do not independently diagnose illness or change treatment.
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3. How much nighttime care can a family manage?
Key point: Many families can safely provide nighttime care when the older adult is stable, the home is adapted, and there is a clear emergency plan. Professional support becomes more important when the person needs frequent assistance, has repeated falls, severe cognitive symptoms, complex diabetes, medical devices, or unstable clinical conditions.
Family caregiving is valuable, but chronic sleep disruption can affect health, concentration, mood, and safe decision-making. Instead of assuming one person must stay awake indefinitely, families should design a sustainable rota, use home modifications and alert systems, and seek professional help when the care load exceeds what can be provided safely.
What families often do best
When trained support may be needed
4. NA and PN: how are they different, and who is suitable for overnight care?
Key point: In Thailand, an NA or care assistant mainly supports basic daily activities and observation within training and supervision. A PN has a one-year nursing-assistant certificate and may assist with a broader range of delegated nursing tasks under an RN’s supervision. Neither role replaces a registered nurse for assessment, diagnosis, treatment decisions, or unstable high-risk care.
NA vs PN for overnight care
| Area | NA / Care Assistant | PN / Practical Nursing Assistant |
|---|---|---|
| Training | Training length and accreditation vary; credentials must be verified | Typically a one-year certificate program approved under Thai nursing education standards |
| Vital signs | May assist with measurement and reporting for stable clients under supervision | May observe, measure, record, and promptly report changes under an RN-directed plan |
| Daily living assistance | Core role: mobility, hygiene, toileting, meals, comfort, and fall prevention | Can assist alongside delegated nursing-support duties |
| Clinical procedures | Limited to training, policy, and delegated non-complex care | May assist with selected tasks within training and under RN supervision |
| Best suited for | Stable older adults needing personal care, supervision, and fall-prevention support | People with more complex needs after RN assessment; unstable or high-risk cases require RN/medical care |
| Service fee | Quoted after assessment of hours, duties, and risk level | Quoted after assessment of clinical needs and scope |
A practical model used by many families
Families may share daytime care and arrange trained overnight support when frequent assistance or safety monitoring is needed. The schedule should match the person’s sleep, toileting, mobility, cognition, and medical plan—not a fixed 22:00–06:00 formula. Cost should be weighed against safety, caregiver health, and continuity of care.
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5. KIN Home Care — screened NA, PN, and RN support at home
Key point: KIN assesses the client before recommending an appropriate caregiver level, screens credentials and work history, provides orientation to the care plan, and maintains an escalation and replacement process. Replacement timing is subject to staff availability, location, and service terms; emergencies should always be directed to 1669 or the nearest hospital.
The main difference between an agency-supported service and hiring an individual directly is the care system behind the caregiver: assessment, written duties, supervision, reporting, escalation, and contingency planning. No provider can promise zero gaps or prevent every emergency, so service commitments should be stated clearly in the contract.
Identity, training, experience, and relevant background are checked before placement. Families can review the proposed caregiver profile and the defined scope of work.
24-hour coordination channel
If the assigned caregiver becomes unavailable, KIN coordinates replacement according to urgency, location, staff availability, and the agreed service terms.
RN-led escalation plan
When an abnormal change is observed, the caregiver follows the written escalation plan: ensure immediate safety, contact the supervisor or RN, and call 1669 for emergency symptoms. The caregiver does not independently make medical decisions.
Regular family reporting
Care notes and relevant observations can be shared according to the agreed reporting schedule, with urgent changes reported promptly.
KIN also provideshome physical therapy, registered nursing at home, and, when the person’s needs change, assessment forKIN residential rehabilitation careorDay Care.Care plans are reassessed rather than simply transferred without review. ReadKIN client testimonials.
“Nighttime safety is not about keeping every older adult under constant surveillance. It is about matching the environment, care plan, and caregiver skill level to the person’s actual risk—so families can rest without leaving preventable hazards unmanaged.”
— KIN Rehabilitation & Homecare | Established 2018 | Six locations across Bangkok, Pattaya, and Salaya
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