In many Coon Rapids cases, the most persuasive evidence isn’t just the fall itself—it’s the conditions leading up to it.
Families frequently report patterns like:
- A sudden change in mobility, balance, or medication schedules after a care conference.
- Increased walker/wheelchair use without a corresponding update to supervision or transfer assistance.
- Staff turnover on a specific shift, resulting in less consistent fall-risk monitoring.
- More residents moving through shared spaces around shift changes (where falls can occur during transfers, restroom trips, or hallway ambulation).
Minnesota cases can turn on whether the facility responded reasonably to known risks. That means we look closely at the timeline of updates, not just the incident report.


