Lake Oswego is a suburban community with a mix of long-term residents, active seniors, and facilities that serve people with changing mobility needs. In fall cases, that matters because risks tend to increase gradually—medication changes, worsening balance, new mobility limitations, or transfers that require more assistance than before.
So when families ask, “Was this avoidable?” the legal question usually becomes whether the facility had notice of an elevated fall risk and still failed to adjust care.
Common local patterns we see in Oregon nursing home fall investigations include:
- Medication or health changes that weren’t matched quickly enough with updated fall precautions
- Transfer and mobility assistance that fell short during busy shifts
- Unsafe routes inside the facility (lighting, flooring transitions, bathroom setup) that weren’t corrected after concerns were raised


