While every facility is different, Henderson-area cases frequently involve the same kinds of risk conditions:
- Common-area transitions: falls near dining rooms, hallways, or activity spaces when residents are moving between supervised and less-supervised areas.
- Bathroom and transfer hazards: wet floors, insufficient grab-bar support, inadequate assistance during toileting, and breakdowns in transfer protocols.
- Staffing pressure during peak hours: injuries that occur when facilities are short-staffed or when multiple residents require help at the same time.
- Medication and mobility changes: falls soon after dosage changes, new sedating medications, or adjustments that affect balance and alertness.
- Call-bell and alarm response delays: when alarms are triggered but help arrives late—or documentation suggests the response wasn’t consistent with the resident’s care plan.
These details matter because the legal issue is often not “did a fall happen?” but whether the facility took reasonable steps based on what they already knew about the resident’s risk.


