After a fall, families often get quick explanations but incomplete details. In many Central Valley communities—including Sanger—care can involve frequent shift changes, complex medication schedules, and residents who move between levels of care.
When a facility denies preventability, the dispute usually turns on records and timing, such as:
- What the resident’s fall risk assessment said before the incident
- Whether the care plan matched mobility needs (walker, cane, wheelchair, gait assistance)
- Whether staff followed documented protocols for alarms, toileting assistance, and transfers
- How quickly staff responded to the incident and documented what they observed
A lawyer’s job is to translate those records into a clear negligence theory under California standards—and to do it before gaps become harder to prove.


