In Central Florida, many residents spend more time than families expect in common areas and during daily transitions—especially around:
- Meal times and medication rounds when routines shift
- Transfer periods (bed-to-chair, chair-to-bathroom, wheelchair-to-walker)
- After visitors arrive or schedules change (more activity, more movement)
- Evening hours when staffing levels can feel stretched
Those moments matter because fall prevention is not just “put up a sign.” It’s consistent supervision, correct assistive device use, safe bathroom and walkway conditions, and timely response when alarms or call buttons are triggered.


