Havelock families often deal with facilities where residents have complex mobility needs and where day-to-day conditions can increase risk—think dim lighting in hallways, slippery surfaces in wet-weather seasons, and frequent movement between rooms for therapy or meals.
When a fall happens, the facility may point to “the resident’s condition.” That’s not the end of the story. North Carolina cases frequently turn on whether the facility:
- kept an accurate fall-risk assessment up to date
- followed the resident’s care plan consistently
- provided the staff coverage needed for safe transfers and ambulation
- maintained safe environments (including bathrooms, flooring, and lighting)
- documented what staff knew before the fall and what they did immediately after


