Many nursing home falls in the Trenton area occur during routine transitions—times when staff are moving residents, managing alarms, and handling multiple care tasks at once. That doesn’t mean the facility is “always at fault,” but it does mean families should pay close attention to what was happening right before the fall.
Common Trenton-area scenarios we see in litigation planning include:
- After-meal or post-medication transitions when residents may be unsteady or confused
- Bathroom and transfer moments where grab bars, lighting, and staff assistance matter
- Medication or mobility changes where risk assessments may not be updated quickly enough
- Shift-change handoffs where communication gaps can delay fall-risk interventions
When a fall happens in one of these predictable windows, the question becomes whether the facility adapted care appropriately to the resident’s needs—before the injury.


