In a busy South Bay community, families often get pulled into doctor visits and daily care coordination. While that’s understandable, the first 48–72 hours after a fall can strongly affect what can be proven later.
Consider gathering:
- The incident details: date/time, where the fall happened (room, hallway, bathroom, common area), and what the resident was doing.
- How the resident was found: whether staff noted dizziness, confusion, wandering, or an unsafe transfer attempt.
- What the facility says happened vs. what records show: compare the initial explanation to the written incident report.
- Copies of fall-related documents (or requests for them): incident report, fall risk assessment, updated care plan, and staff shift notes.
- Medical records: ER visit notes, imaging results, discharge instructions, and rehab evaluations.
- Any video preservation request: if the fall occurred in an area with cameras, ask the facility to preserve footage.
If you feel overwhelmed, don’t worry about getting everything perfect. A short, factual timeline helps attorneys quickly identify what will matter most for a Gardena nursing home fall claim.


