Troy has a mix of older buildings, high seasonal activity, and a steady flow of residents and visitors throughout the year. While the setting can vary, the legal issue tends to be consistent: whether the facility had notice of fall risk and still failed to act reasonably.
In practical terms, that can show up when:
- A resident’s mobility changes (after medication adjustments or worsening balance) weren’t matched with updated supervision.
- Alarms, call systems, or transfer assistance weren’t used consistently.
- Bathroom layouts, lighting, or flooring problems weren’t addressed after earlier concerns.
- Staff documentation doesn’t line up with the timeline of the fall and the response that followed.
When those gaps exist, families typically need a lawyer who can translate the records into a clear, evidence-backed negligence theory.


