Marco Island has a distinctive mix of residents and visitors, and that “always-on” pace can show up inside long-term care environments. When a facility is dealing with staffing pressures, higher turnover, or more frequent operational demands, fall-prevention practices can break down in ways families don’t see until after a serious injury.
In fall cases we often see issues tied to:
- Shift-to-shift communication problems (when a risk assessment or care plan wasn’t followed consistently)
- After-hours supervision gaps (when residents need more assistance than the facility provided)
- Environmental risks that aren’t corrected quickly—especially after maintenance issues or layout changes
- Medication-related instability, where dizziness or confusion wasn’t paired with updated fall precautions
If you’re trying to determine whether the fall was truly unavoidable, the answer usually depends on what the facility knew before the incident—and how it responded after.


