Every facility is different, but the most compelling cases usually show a preventable breakdown in planning, supervision, or response. In Aurora, families frequently report situations like:
1) Unsafe transfers during routine changes
Falls can occur when a resident’s assistance level isn’t updated after medication adjustments, therapy progress, or worsening balance. If the care plan and actual transfer practices don’t match, that gap is often central to the case.
2) High-traffic areas and rushed movement
Aurora’s suburban layout means many residents and staff are navigating busy common areas—hallways, dining routes, therapy corridors, and activity rooms. A fall can happen when staff are stretched thin, alarms aren’t monitored appropriately, or residents are encouraged to move without the level of help they require.
3) Bathroom safety issues and delayed corrections
Slip-and-fall risk often comes from wet floors, poorly maintained grab bars, inadequate lighting, or equipment not properly secured. We look for evidence that the facility knew about recurring hazards and still failed to correct them.
4) “Unwitnessed” falls with missing documentation
If staff can’t explain how the fall happened—or the incident description changes between reports—that inconsistency can affect credibility. We review the full paper trail: shift notes, risk scores, care-plan updates, and post-fall monitoring.