"My mom is doing everything they told her… so why does she still feel bad?"
I hear this more than almost any other question in my work as a nurse and health coach.
This statement comes from engaged people who are paying attention, researching, advocating, and accompanying parents to appointments. And even with all of their effort, they're still not getting answers. It's exhausting and demoralizing, and most of them assume the problem is with their parent or the healthcare provider.
It's not.
The Gap Nobody Talks About
There's a real divide between medical advice and how it actually plays out in daily life. It's nobody's fault. Parents, no matter what age, are human and don't always realize what's important to share. Doctors are working from a clinical picture, not a full view of someone's day-to-day reality. Adult children have busy lives and do their best to support their parents, but have competing priorities.
In my experience, two patterns come up again and again:
1. Medication misunderstandings
- Many parents believe they're taking medications correctly, but timing, food interactions, or dosage changes can create problems.
- When prescriptions come from multiple providers or different pharmacies, it's easy to be prescribed the same medication multiple times, and it won't be caught by the neighborhood pharmacist.
2. Nutrition advice that doesn't fit their actual health needs
- While following general "healthy eating" guidelines is a good starting point, it may not fully address individual needs. In some cases, more specific dietary plans, such as low-sodium, adjusted-protein, or other diets, are necessary to support kidney health, manage heart conditions, manage diabetes, or account for medication interactions.
From the outside, it looks like a parent is following all the instructions, but in reality, there is more to consider. Small details add up and make a big difference.
What's Actually Missing
It's rarely more information. What I see families need most is:
- Clarity — understanding not just what to do, but why, and what to expect and how to adjust when changes happen
- Personalization — a plan built around their parent's full health picture, their likes/dislikes, and what they're willing to do
- Connection — someone who helps them see how medications, nutrition, symptoms, and real life all interact
Managing a chronic condition isn't about following instructions in isolation. In fact, the more support our parents have, the better their quality of life will be.
What Actually Helps
When I work with clients, we don't try to fix everything at once. We simplify medication routines, align nutrition with their specific conditions, and build a plan that fits their actual lives, not an idealized version.
That's when things begin to change. Parents don't feel like they did in their 30s, but they feel good... good enough to enjoy their days, stay independent, and give their children some peace of mind.
One Question Worth Asking at the Next Appointment
Encourage your parent to ask, or ask it yourself if you're in the room:
"What are the 1–2 most important things we should focus on right now, and what should we expect as a result? And if we're not seeing that, when should we come back to you?"
That last part changes everything. It turns a one-way instruction into a two-way plan.
If your parent is managing a chronic condition and still not feeling well, it may be time to bring in outside support, someone who can see the full picture and help bridge the gap.
That's exactly what I help with. I offer a free consultation and would love to talk. → Schedule a 1:1 with me
Cheri Sacks, R.N.
Cheri Sacks, "Your Neighbor, The Nurse" Blending medical insight and holistic care to help you feel better and take control of your health.
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