In suburban communities around Riverdale, families frequently notice a common theme after a serious fall: the incident didn’t occur in a vacuum. Instead, it often follows a period where risk was present—sometimes obvious to staff, and sometimes not reflected accurately in paperwork.
Ask whether the facility documented and addressed issues like:
- Frequent call-outs or staffing changes around the time of the fall
- Late or inconsistent assistance with transfers (bed-to-chair, walker use, toileting)
- Unupdated fall-risk levels after medication changes or a decline in mobility
- Environmental hazards relevant to Georgia’s humid climate (slick floors after spills, wet entryways, poor traction in common areas)
- Repeated near-misses or “minor incidents” that weren’t treated as warning signs
When these details appear in incident notes but don’t match the care plan—or when the timeline is unclear—that’s often where accountability begins.


