In a community like Berea, families commonly notice the same pattern after a serious fall: the explanation changes over time, details get “summarized,” and incident information is scattered across different documents.
Falls can become legally significant when they connect to:
- Shift-to-shift supervision gaps (who was assigned, how alarms were monitored, and whether assistance was provided)
- Outdated fall-risk information (care plans not updated after medication changes or mobility decline)
- Environment issues (bathroom safety, lighting at night, trip hazards, or improper use of assistive devices)
- Delayed response (time between the fall, discovery, and getting the resident to treatment)
Our job is to reconstruct the timeline and translate it into a clear liability story—without letting the facility’s paperwork control the narrative.


