In and around Fayetteville, many residents live through routine changes—new medications after hospital visits, mobility declines, or adjustments to walking support. Those transitions are precisely when facilities are expected to reassess risk and update care.
In fall litigation, the key question is often not simply whether someone fell—it’s whether the facility had notice of increasing risk and failed to take reasonable steps. That can include:
- Not updating fall-risk assessments after condition changes
- Inconsistent use of assistive devices (walkers, gait belts, transfer aids)
- Delayed or inadequate response to alarms/call signals
- Unsafe environmental conditions that should have been identified and corrected
Georgia nursing home cases commonly require careful alignment between incident reporting and the resident’s care history—because the facility’s defense is frequently that the fall was “unavoidable.”


