In many fall cases, the key issue isn’t whether a resident can fall—it’s whether the facility responded appropriately to known risk. For Mount Clemens families, that often shows up in practical ways:
- Residents with mobility limits not receiving consistent hands-on assistance during transfers
- Alarms or fall-prevention systems not being used as intended, or ignored after repeated near-falls
- Bathroom and hallway hazards that should have been addressed after prior concerns
- Care plans that don’t match what the resident actually needs day-to-day
Michigan nursing homes are expected to follow standards of reasonable care. When records show the facility had warning signs, but precautions weren’t tightened in time, liability becomes a real question—not a guess.


