Lafayette is a largely residential community with active neighborhoods, frequent visits, and many older residents who rely on consistent mobility support. That means fall risk often isn’t limited to one moment—it can build from daily routines and environment.
In Lafayette-area facilities, families commonly report concerns tied to:
- High-traffic common areas (busy hallways during shift changes, meal times, or visiting hours)
- Transfer and mobility routines that don’t match a resident’s current abilities after medication changes or illness
- Lighting and wayfinding issues in hallways and restrooms—especially at night or during power/maintenance transitions
- Suburban “at-a-glance” oversight problems, where families live nearby and assume care is consistent, but documentation shows gaps
When a facility argues the fall was “just an accident,” the key question becomes whether reasonable precautions were in place for that resident, at that time, in that environment.


