A house call for seniors in Hamburg is a private medical acute consultation in which a licensed physician examines older and chronically ill people at home or in a care facility anywhere in Hamburg, daily from 6 am to midnight and usually within 60 to 90 minutes of the call. The service is aimed at seniors, nursing-home residents and chronically ill people whose regular GP round cannot be reached in time and who are not in a life-threatening situation.
Why a private medical house call for seniors makes sense
A private medical house call for older and chronically ill people makes sense when an acute deterioration occurs between two routine rounds and the treating GP cannot attend within a few hours. Hamburg's population is ageing, and with rising age come mobility limits and chronic disease; many of the city's roughly 1.9 million residents live with several diagnoses at once. When fever, increased pain, new confusion in dementia, an infected wound or a change in consciousness arises in between, the question becomes who can respond medically on short notice.
The alternatives are poorly suited to many patients: the regular GP is rarely available within the hour, the KV Hamburg on-call service on 116 117 works with waiting times depending on workload, and a trip to an emergency department, for instance at the UKE or an Asklepios hospital, is highly stressful for very old or dementia-affected people. A private medical house call at home or in the care facility complements the contracted care structure but does not replace it, giving relatives, staff and the GP a clinical assessment within a decisive window of a few hours.
House calls for seniors and the chronically ill
House calls relieve older and chronically ill people in particular, because they avoid transport, waiting time and infection risk. Seniors feel safer in their own home or familiar care-home room than in an unfamiliar practice; a waiting room can become a source of contagion during the flu and cold season. For people living alone or who are bedbound in neighbourhoods such as Eppendorf, Barmbek or Harburg, the journey to a practice carries organisational hurdles that a house call removes entirely.
Chronic conditions such as heart failure, diabetes mellitus, COPD, Parkinson's or rheumatic complaints require close monitoring; several diagnoses often coexist (multimorbidity), which makes care complex. During a house call the physician also gains a picture of everyday life: trip hazards in the home, nutritional status and the medications actually being taken can be checked on site. Continuous follow-up detects deterioration early, helps prevent complications and can reduce hospital admissions; where needed, we coordinate with nursing services and physiotherapists for holistic care.
Typical reasons for a house call to seniors
Acute infections and unclear deterioration
Pneumonia, urinary tract infections and gastrointestinal infections are frequent in older people and often present atypically, for example with new confusion, falls or apathy instead of classic fever. A timely physical exam with auscultation, vital signs, temperature, oxygen saturation and a urinary dipstick clarifies, within the 60 to 90 minutes until arrival, whether ambulatory therapy is sufficient or hospital admission is needed.
Wound care between scheduled rounds
Pressure ulcers, venous leg ulcers, post-surgical wounds or minor injuries with signs of infection often require a medical decision, not because the care staff lack skill, but because written medical orders for dressings, antibiotics or further diagnostics need to be on file. A private medical house call can document the finding, order therapy and prepare a clean hand-off to the treating GP on the next working day.
Palliative pain and symptom control
In palliative care, for instance with advanced cancer or end-stage heart failure, sudden pain spikes, dyspnoea or restlessness are medical crises that are deeply distressing without a clinical response. A house call can re-evaluate the analgesic regimen, organise contact with the specialised outpatient palliative team (SAPV) in Hamburg and adjust as-needed medications. Important: palliative care is delivered in close coordination with existing structures, a house call does not replace established SAPV care.
Deterioration in dementia
People with advanced dementia frequently express illness through changes in behaviour, for example restlessness, aggression, apathy or food refusal. Causes range from pain and infection to electrolyte imbalance and adverse medication effects. A private medical consultation in familiar surroundings, ideally with care staff and a trusted carer present, supports differential diagnosis without the often-counterproductive transfer to an emergency department.
How a house call with RAB Hamburg works
1. Telephone registration
The call is made by relatives, care staff or a legal guardian on 040 524 729 688. We collect the patient's name, the address, the acute symptoms, prior conditions, current medication and, very important, who is authorised to make legally binding decisions (health-care power of attorney, guardianship directive, court-appointed guardianship). If an advance directive exists, please mention it on the call so the physician arrives prepared.
2. Physician callback and travel
A physician usually calls back within a few minutes, clarifies the symptoms and agrees a time. We attend every one of Hamburg's 7 boroughs, typically arriving within 60 to 90 minutes. In the meantime it helps if care staff or relatives prepare current vitals, the medication plan, the allergy list, the most recent GP report and, where present, the advance directive and power of attorney.
3. Examination in familiar surroundings
The visit takes place in the home or the resident's room. Depending on the reason for the call, the physician assesses general condition, circulation, lungs, abdomen, neurological status, skin and any wounds; on-site options include blood-pressure and blood-glucose measurement, ECG and rapid lab tests. With cognitively impaired patients we use calm, structured communication and involve care staff and relatives in the medical history.
4. Therapy, documentation and hand-off
After clinical assessment, medical orders are written, including as-needed medication, injections or infusions, follow-up checks, wound protocol, prescriptions and hospital admission if needed. A copy of the report is handed over and, if you wish, we forward it by e-mail to the treating GP so that care continues seamlessly on the next working day. Where appropriate we arrange a follow-up appointment or a referral to specialists. Billing follows the German medical fee schedule (GOÄ); privately insured patients submit the invoice to their insurer, statutorily insured patients pay as self-payers.
The legal framework: power of attorney, guardianship, advance directives
For patients who can no longer express their wishes themselves, clarifying who can decide on their behalf is essential. A health-care power of attorney designates someone to make health decisions; a guardianship directive nominates a preferred guardian whom the guardianship court formally appoints; an advance directive documents specific treatment wishes in case of decisional incapacity. The Hamburg social affairs authority (Sozialbehörde) and the Hamburg Pflegestützpunkte offer free counselling on these three instruments.
For the acute consultation this means: if the patient is not decisionally competent, the holder of the power of attorney or the legal guardian decides. In life-threatening situations without a reachable representative, the attending physician documents the medical indication and acts in the presumed will of the patient, ideally guided by an advance directive.
Working with care staff and relatives
The quality of a house call depends heavily on the hand-off, and it noticeably relieves caregiving relatives at the same time. A brief progress note of the last few days, an up-to-date medication list, knowledge of the treating GP and, ideally, the presence of a nurse or carer who knows the patient well are all helpful. We involve relatives by phone or video call if they cannot be present and decisions need shared ownership. This cross-setting coordination is essential in dementia and palliative care.
Distinction from emergency services and the statutory on-call service
A private medical visit does not replace emergency medicine. For suspected heart attack, stroke, severe breathing difficulty, unconsciousness or other life-threatening situations, 112 is the only correct contact. For statutorily insured patients without acute danger to life, the KV Hamburg on-call service on 116 117 is the regular care structure outside office hours, with waiting times depending on workload and referral to on-call practices in Altona, Wandsbek or Harburg, among others. A private medical house call is a complementary option when a timely clinical assessment is desired and private insurance, civil-service support or self-payment cover the bill.
Which districts are covered?
We attend every one of Hamburg's 7 boroughs, from Hamburg-Mitte and Altona through Eimsbüttel, Hamburg-Nord and Wandsbek to Bergedorf and Harburg, including neighbourhoods such as Eppendorf, Winterhude, Blankenese, Ottensen, HafenCity and Bramfeld. Travel time is generally 60 to 90 minutes.
Frequently asked questions about house calls for seniors
Who can request a house call?
The decisionally competent patient themselves; otherwise the holder of a health-care power of attorney or a court-appointed guardian. In practice the call is often made by relatives or a facility's nursing lead on 040 524 729 688. The caller should be able to name the legal representation arrangement.
Does a private visit replace the treating GP?
No. The continuous care remains with the contracted GP or home physician. A private medical house call is a point-in-time acute consultation that hands off a finding and, if needed, therapy recommendations to the continuing care structure. We document so that the GP can pick up on the next working day.
How are advance directives handled?
Where an advance directive exists, it is binding for treatment to the extent it applies to the current situation. With dementia we frequently need to clarify whether the directive was issued while the patient was competent and whether it speaks to the actual situation. We take time to reconstruct the presumed will with relatives or the holder of the power of attorney.
What does a house call cost?
Billing follows the German medical fee schedule (GOÄ). A house call typically starts at €150–300; the total depends on time of day, travel, scope of examination and any additional services. More concrete figures are discussed during registration. Privately insured patients receive an invoice for submission to their insurer; statutorily insured patients pay as self-payers.
Do you also provide palliative care?
We can assess a palliative crisis, initiate symptom control and organise contact with specialised outpatient palliative care in Hamburg (SAPV). Continuous palliative care in the SAPV sense is its own structure and should be coordinated as such; we help identify the right interfaces.
Are the physicians experienced with dementia?
Our partner physicians have internal-medicine, general-practice or geriatric experience and routinely care for cognitively impaired patients. Calm, structured communication, involvement of trusted carers and a gentle examination setting are standard.
Related guides
Helpful background for families and staff: our notes on cost and billing of a private house call and the option to request an appointment online. A German version of this article is available at Senioren-Hausbesuch.
When to call us
If an acute medical situation arises for an older or chronically ill person in Hamburg, the GP cannot be reached on short notice and there is no life-threatening emergency, we are available daily from 6 am to midnight on 040 524 729 688; alternatively you can request an appointment online. For life-threatening emergencies always call 112.