How QuietBridge builds a continuity plan
QuietBridge scores practical handoff friction across trusted contacts, access readiness, document visibility, medication continuity, dependent load, money timing, work exposure, housing friction, and location distance.
Decision model
- Stable continuity plan: the household already has enough contacts and clarity to avoid a chaotic first handoff.
- Priority contact-first plan: the household can function, but one missing contact, one missing bill map, or one unclear key route could slow the response.
- Critical continuity plan: multiple high-friction areas stack together, so QuietBridge pushes urgent action around people, access, and medication first.
- Manual rescue continuity plan: used when no contact is ready and the situation combines care pressure with locked or undocumented access.
Why this is useful
Most households do not need a full legal estate workflow to benefit from continuity planning. They need one practical sequence for the next 24–72 hours that someone else can actually execute under stress.