While every facility’s policies differ, nursing home fall patterns in Connecticut often come down to what the resident and the environment required day-to-day.
In Ansonia-area cases, we commonly see issues tied to:
- Frequent transitions in care (changes in mobility after illness, medication adjustments, or post-hospital discharge)
- High-need residents who require consistent supervision during alarms, transfers, and bathroom assistance
- Environment-related hazards that are easy to overlook—poor lighting in hallways, wet floors, clutter near doorways, or problems with grab bars and handrails
- Shift-to-shift communication gaps, especially around fall-risk updates and what staff were told to watch for
These factors matter legally because the question is not simply whether a fall happened. The question is whether the facility responded to known risk in a reasonable, well-documented way.


