Top Questions to Ask Before Admitting a Parent to a Care Home in Kerala
The brochure looks good. The manager is warm and the rooms are clean on the day you visit. So you sign the admission form — and two months later you're fielding late-night calls about missed medications, extra charges you didn't expect, and staff who can't communicate with your parent in Malayalam.
This happens more often than care homes will admit. After personally visiting over 40 care homes across Kerala — in Kochi, Thiruvananthapuram, Kozhikode, and smaller towns — I've watched families make expensive, stressful mistakes that a few direct questions upfront would have prevented.
These are those questions. They're grouped by what they're testing for, so you understand why each one matters, not just what to ask.
Before You Visit: Prepare Your List
Print this list and bring it on the tour. Don't rely on memory — the emotional weight of the visit (the residents you see, the way it smells, the manager's confidence) will crowd out half these questions if you're not holding them in your hand. Our 15-point verification checklist covers what we look for during professional visits; this guide focuses on what families should ask directly.
Questions About Daily Life and Environment
1. Can we visit at any time, without advance notice?
This is the most revealing question you can ask. A care home with nothing to hide will say yes immediately. Hesitation — "we prefer advance notice so we can prepare" — is a flag. What exactly are they preparing? The standard at any quality facility is that family members can drop by during reasonable hours without calling ahead. If the answer is no, walk away.
2. What is a typical day like for a resident at this level of care?
Ask this specifically for the care level your parent needs — basic, assisted, or memory care. A vague answer ("we keep them engaged and comfortable") is less reassuring than a specific one ("breakfast at 8, a group activity or physiotherapy session mid-morning, lunch at 12:30, rest, then individual activity or TV in the afternoon"). Daily structure matters enormously for elderly wellbeing, especially for residents with dementia or mobility challenges.
3. What meals are served, and how are dietary restrictions handled?
Ask to see a week's menu, not just hear about it. Find out how they handle special diets — diabetic, soft food, specific religious requirements. Ask who prepares the meals and whether a nutritionist is involved. In many Kerala care homes, meals are a point of genuine pride; in others they're an afterthought. The kitchen visit is part of our standard inspection, and it tells you more than almost any other part of the facility.
Questions About Medical Care and Emergencies
4. What happens if my parent has a medical emergency at 2 AM?
This is the question most families forget until they need the answer. You want specifics: is there a nurse on duty overnight? Which hospital do they transfer to? How long does it take to get a vehicle? Who calls the family, and within what timeframe? The best care homes have a written emergency protocol they're happy to share. Generic reassurances aren't enough here.
5. Is a doctor available on-site, or only on-call?
Many care homes have a visiting doctor who comes once or twice a week. That's fine for monitoring, but understand what it means for day-to-day decisions. Who decides whether a symptom warrants a doctor's visit, or whether to adjust medication? Is that person a qualified nurse? What are their credentials? Kerala has excellent nursing training institutions — most quality homes have well-qualified resident nurses — but verify rather than assume.
6. How are medications managed and documented?
Ask to see the medication administration record (MAR) system, even if you can't understand all the details. Quality homes keep written records for every dose given. Homes that rely on informal systems or single staff members to "know" each resident's medications are a risk. This matters especially for residents on multiple medications, which is most elderly patients with chronic conditions.
Questions About Costs and Contracts
7. What exactly is included in the monthly fee, and what costs extra?
Get this in writing. Common additional charges in Kerala care homes include: laundry, physiotherapy sessions, escorting to external hospital visits, special diets, incontinence supplies, and air conditioning. A home that quotes ₹18,000/month may actually cost ₹24,000–₹28,000/month once these are included. Our detailed cost guide breaks down typical pricing across care levels — use it as a benchmark when evaluating any facility's quote.
8. What is the fee revision policy?
Care home fees in Kerala have been rising 8–15% annually as operating costs go up. Ask: how often do fees change? Is there advance notice? Is there a cap on increases? For long-term residents, a home that revises fees frequently without notice can become financially unmanageable within two to three years.
9. What is the exit process and notice period?
What happens if the arrangement doesn't work out — or if your parent's health deteriorates to a point the care home can no longer manage? How many days' notice is required? Is a deposit refunded, and on what terms? A transparent care home will walk you through this scenario without discomfort. Reluctance to discuss exit terms is a warning sign.
Questions About Staff and Communication
10. What is the caregiver-to-resident ratio, and does it change at night or on weekends?
In Kerala, most quality care homes aim for a 1:4 to 1:6 ratio during the day. But the ratio often drops significantly overnight and on Sundays. Ask specifically about those shifts. A facility that maintains adequate staffing 24/7 is genuinely more expensive to run — which is why this question is a proxy for whether the care home invests properly in the people who actually look after your parent.
11. Do staff speak Malayalam? Can my parent communicate comfortably?
This matters more than most NRI families anticipate. If your parent is only comfortable in Malayalam and staff are primarily from other states, small daily needs — discomfort, requests for water, wanting to use the bathroom — may go unaddressed. Ask this directly and observe during the tour: are staff conversing naturally with residents?
12. Can we speak privately with a current resident or their family?
This is the single best reality check available to you. A confident care home will facilitate this without hesitation. If the answer is a polite but firm no, or if every reference they provide is suspiciously positive, proceed with caution. You're not looking for perfection — you're looking for honest answers about what day-to-day life actually looks like.
Questions About Family Involvement
13. How do you communicate with families about the resident's health and wellbeing?
Is there a regular update call? A family portal or app? A WhatsApp group? What triggers an immediate call vs a weekly update? Families living abroad or in other cities need a clear communication system. The best homes have a designated staff member responsible for family communication, and they're proactive, not reactive.
14. What is your policy on overnight stays by family members?
Many families from the Gulf or other countries want to stay with their parent during initial adjustment periods, or during health scares. Policies vary enormously: some care homes have guest rooms; others prohibit overnight stays entirely. Know this before you commit.
One Final Question
15. Why should we choose this care home over the alternatives?
Ask them to make their own case. Listen for specificity — a good manager will cite things like inspection outcomes, staff tenure, activities programs, or specific care innovations. Vague answers about "a family atmosphere" and "we treat every resident like our own" are easy to say and mean nothing without evidence.
What to Do With the Answers
Take notes during the visit. Compare answers across the two or three care homes you're seriously considering. Prioritise the questions about emergency care, staffing ratios, and unannounced visits — these are the non-negotiables. The cost and communication questions matter, but they can often be negotiated. The others cannot.
Before finalising any care home, also ask to see their recent inspection report if available. The homes listed on GetCareIndia's verified directory have been personally visited by our team. Each verified listing shows inspection findings, the care level offered, pricing range, and photos from the actual facility — not stock images. You can browse verified care homes in Kochi or explore options in Thiruvananthapuram to see what a genuinely transparent listing looks like.
The admission decision is one of the biggest your family will make. These questions won't make it easy — but they'll make sure you're choosing with your eyes open.
Frequently Asked Questions
What documents are required for admission to a care home in Kerala?
Most Kerala care homes require: a government-issued ID (Aadhaar card) for the resident, age proof, recent medical records including a doctor's summary of current health status, emergency contact details, and in some cases a signed family consent form. Homes that accept residents with dementia or serious medical conditions may require additional documentation from a physician. Ask each care home for their specific checklist at the time of enquiry.
How long does the admission process take at Kerala care homes?
For most care homes in Kerala, the admission process takes 3–7 days from initial enquiry to move-in: one to two days for document collection, a brief assessment visit by the care home's nurse or medical officer, and then finalising the agreement and fee structure. Homes with waiting lists may have a longer lead time, particularly for specialised units like memory care or post-surgical rehabilitation.
Can I move my parent out of a care home if I'm not satisfied?
Yes. Most care homes in Kerala require 15–30 days' written notice before a resident's departure. Review the notice period and deposit refund policy in the admission agreement before signing. There is no legal barrier to moving a resident; the practical challenge is finding and preparing an alternative placement in that timeframe. It's worth identifying your second-choice care home before completing admission, so you have a fallback if things don't work out.
What is the difference between a care home and a nursing home in Kerala?
In Kerala, the terms are often used interchangeably, but there is a meaningful distinction. A care home (old age home) primarily offers residential care and assistance with daily activities — meals, hygiene, mobility, and companionship. A nursing home provides continuous skilled nursing care for residents with complex medical conditions and is regulated more strictly. If your parent requires daily wound care, IV medication, or management of a serious ongoing condition, they likely need a nursing home or the nursing-level care tier at a larger facility. See our guide to nursing homes in Kerala for more detail.
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