In suburban Michigan communities like Clawson, many residents return to facilities with a familiar routine—until something shifts. A resident’s mobility may decline after a medication adjustment, a health event, or a change in cognitive status. When those changes happen, the facility must update supervision and fall-prevention measures.
In the real world, families often learn too late that:
- the care plan didn’t reflect the resident’s current fall risk,
- staff were relying on outdated mobility assumptions,
- alarms or assistive devices weren’t used consistently,
- or the environment (bathroom layout, lighting, flooring transitions) wasn’t addressed after early warning signs.
Those “before and after” details frequently determine whether a fall injury claim moves quickly—or gets dragged out.


