High Point is a growing community with a mix of long-term residents and frequent changes in staffing and schedules. In many nursing home fall cases, the dispute isn’t whether a fall occurred—it’s whether the facility responded to risk appropriately.
Common High Point–area patterns we see in these cases include:
- Inconsistent supervision during shift handoffs (risk changes, mobility status changes, and alerts get missed)
- Bathroom and transfer hazards (worn flooring, inadequate lighting, poor placement of grab bars or assist devices)
- After-hours staffing constraints that affect safe toileting, walking assistance, and alarm response
- Care plan drift—when documentation shows one level of assistance, but daily routines reflect another
When families ask, “How could this happen?” the answer often lies in documentation gaps and whether pre-fall warnings were actually carried out.


