Cahokia Heights sits in the St. Louis metro area, where many residents rely on long-term care facilities for help with mobility, medication routines, and daily supervision. In these settings, fall risks commonly increase around predictable life changes—like medication adjustments, recovery from illness, or transitions after hospital discharge.
We also see patterns that are especially common in suburban and near-metro communities:
- Higher likelihood of post-hospital transitions where care plans haven’t fully caught up to new mobility limits.
- Care-team handoffs (shifts/staffing changes) that can create gaps in supervision or transfer assistance.
- Common-area hazards—bathrooms, hallways, and entrances—where lighting, grab-bar placement, flooring condition, or walker/wheelchair use can matter.
When a fall happens, the key question isn’t “did it occur?” It’s whether the facility’s safety plan matched the resident’s real needs.


