Billings has a mix of urban amenities and long travel distances to specialty care. That matters after a fall because injuries can quickly require transfers, follow-up imaging, rehab, and additional home support.
In many nursing home fall cases in Montana, the “story” the facility tells doesn’t match what families later learn—especially when there are breakdowns in:
- Supervision during mobility and transfers (to/from wheelchairs, beds, toilets)
- Response to alarms and call lights
- Consistent fall-prevention practices across shifts
- Environmental safety (bathroom surfaces, lighting, assistive device availability)
- Care-plan updates after changes in condition
Even when a facility insists a fall was “unavoidable,” the legal question is whether reasonable safeguards were in place for that resident’s known risks—before the injury—and whether staff followed required protocols afterward.


