In suburban communities like Mount Prospect, many residents are moved between levels of care and daily routines quickly—especially after medication changes, increased mobility needs, or discharge planning. That means fall risk can shift fast, and documentation becomes critical.
Common Mount Prospect-area fact patterns we see in fall cases include:
- Transfers and wheelchair-to-bed or bed-to-chair moves where staff may not have used consistent assistive techniques
- Bathroom and hallway hazards, including lighting issues or unsafe surfaces that get addressed slowly
- Alarm response and supervision gaps, particularly during shift changes or when staffing is tight
- Care-plan updates that lag behind a resident’s actual condition, such as worsening balance, dizziness, or confusion
These are the types of issues that often lead to disagreements between families and facility representatives—especially when the facility frames the event as unavoidable.


