Medication Management for Seniors: The Pitfalls Most Families Miss
Most older South Africans are on more medication than they realise. Between the GP, the cardiologist, the rheumatologist, and the pharmacist’s recommendations, the daily routine can quickly become confusing, and sometimes dangerous.
The most common problems
- Duplicate prescriptions, two specialists prescribe the same drug under different brand names.
- Missed doses, a pillbox forgotten on a weekend visit, or a midday dose skipped because lunch was late.
- Incorrect timing, some medications need food; others an empty stomach; some don’t mix with grapefruit or antacids.
- Expired stock at the back of the cupboard.
- Repeat scripts that lapse, the patient runs out and waits days for a refill.
A simple weekly routine that works
- Use a clear pill organiser with morning / afternoon / evening / night compartments for each day.
- Refill it on the same day every week, Sunday afternoons work well.
- Keep a single up-to-date medication list on the fridge.
- Set a recurring calendar reminder seven days before each repeat script runs out.
Warning signs that something is wrong
- New confusion, drowsiness, or balance problems after a medication change
- Rashes or stomach upset
- A parent saying “I don’t think these tablets are doing anything”, they may have stopped taking them
Never let a parent stop or change a chronic medication without speaking to the prescribing doctor.
We collect repeat scripts from local pharmacies across Fourways, Bryanston, Randburg and Northriding. Find out more.
How Serene Assist helps
Our companions can check the weekly pill organiser, collect repeat scripts, sit with the doctor when medications are changed, and flag concerns to the family. We don’t administer medication, that’s a medical role, but we make sure nothing falls through the cracks.

