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Board Certified

Geriatric Medicine

Peer Reviewed

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Medical Advisory

14 Clinicians

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Reviewed Q1 2026

Updated Feb 2026

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Geriatric Condition Library

What is your body telling you?

Plain-language explanations for every diagnosis, medication, and treatment decision that comes with aging — written as if your doctor had thirty minutes and nowhere else to be.

Browse Conditions

340+

Conditions documented

14

Geriatricians on advisory board

98%

Clinician trust rating

Q1 2026

Last full content review

Condition Library

Common conditions, explained clearly

Each entry opens into a medication audit, doctor questions, and drug interaction flags.

Your heart pumps blood through your body with pressure, the way water moves through a hose. When that pressure stays too high for too long, the walls of your blood vessels — and the organs they supply — begin to strain. Most people feel nothing unusual. That's what makes it worth checking.

What the numbers mean

Blood pressure is written as two numbers: 120/80. The top number (systolic) measures pressure when your heart beats. The bottom (diastolic) measures pressure between beats. Readings consistently above 130/80 signal hypertension. In older adults, isolated high systolic pressure is common and just as important to treat.

Insulin is a key that unlocks your cells so they can use sugar for energy. In Type 2 diabetes, the locks stop working well — cells become resistant to insulin's signal. Sugar builds up in your bloodstream instead of fueling your body. Over years, this damages blood vessels, nerves, and organs. The good news: small, consistent changes have real, measurable impact.

What the numbers mean

A1C is the most useful number — it reflects your average blood sugar over three months. Below 7% is generally the target, though many geriatricians prefer 7.5–8% for older adults to avoid dangerous low blood sugar episodes. Ask what target makes sense specifically for you.

Cartilage is the cushioning that sits between bones in your joints — smooth, slippery, and remarkably durable. Osteoarthritis is what happens when that cushion gradually wears thin. Bone begins to press on bone. The joint becomes inflamed, stiff, and painful, especially in the morning or after sitting still. It's the most common joint condition in people over 65, and it's manageable.

What the numbers mean

Osteoarthritis most often affects knees, hips, hands, and spine. X-rays show the structural changes, but pain level doesn't always match what the image shows — some people have dramatic x-ray changes with mild pain, and vice versa. Treatment focuses on function and quality of life, not on reversing the image.

Polypharmacy Safety

Drug combinations that warrant a conversation

These aren't reasons to stop medications — they're reasons to ask your prescriber whether the combination has been reviewed recently.

Ask for a medication review

Pharmacists are often the most accessible expert for medication interaction questions. Many offer comprehensive medication reviews at no cost. Ask specifically: "Can you look at everything I take together and flag any combinations worth discussing with my doctor?"

Trusted Voices

Doctors who forward it. Families who found answers.

From geriatricians recommending it to patients, to adult children Googling their parent's diagnosis at midnight.

"
I forward CareCompass condition pages to patients before follow-up appointments. They arrive with better questions than I've prepared for. That's a sign of genuinely useful patient education.
Portrait of Dr. Patricia Okafor

Dr. Patricia Okafor

Geriatrician

Clinician

Cleveland Clinic Geriatric Medicine

"
My mother has five conditions and sees three specialists. This was the first place I found that explained how her medications interact with each other — not just each one separately. I finally feel like I understand her care.
Portrait of James Whitfield

James Whitfield

Son and primary caregiver

Caregiver

Cleveland, OH

"
I was a high school biology teacher for thirty-two years. I can handle complexity. What I couldn't find anywhere else was someone who respected that intelligence while still being clear. CareCompass does that.
Portrait of Ruth Bergmann

Ruth Bergmann

Retired educator, 71

Patient

Managing Type 2 diabetes and hypertension

"
The drug interaction flags are more clinically nuanced than most resources I'd recommend to patients. I've started using the 'questions to bring to your doctor' lists in my own practice notes.
Portrait of Dr. Samuel Osei-Bonsu

Dr. Samuel Osei-Bonsu

Clinical Pharmacist

Clinician

University of Pittsburgh Medical Center

"
My dad kept dismissing his symptoms as 'just getting old.' I showed him the osteoarthritis page and he recognized himself in every paragraph. He called his doctor the next morning. Sometimes people just need permission to take it seriously.
Portrait of Diane Nakamura

Diane Nakamura

Daughter and caregiver

Caregiver

Portland, OR

"
At 68, I was drowning in appointments, printouts, and contradictory advice. The medication audit checklist helped me realize I was taking two medications that were working against each other. My cardiologist had no idea I was also on that pain medication.
Portrait of Robert Tran

Robert Tran

Retired civil engineer, 68

Patient

Managing three chronic conditions

For clinicians: patient-facing resources you can trust enough to share.

All condition pages are reviewed by our 14-person geriatric advisory board quarterly. Formatted for sharing via patient portal message or printed handout.

14

Advisory clinicians

Q1

Last reviewed 2026

Geriatric Wellness Assessment

See your full wellness picture.

Five questions. Five minutes. A personalized condition-priority summary — emailed as a PDF you can bring to your next appointment, or share with a specialist.

No account required. Results sent to your email. Takes 5 minutes.

01Current medications count
02Mobility confidence scale
03Recent hospitalization
04Active specialists count
05What worries you most
→ Personalized condition-priority PDF