In many Elizabethtown cases, the dispute isn’t whether a fall occurred—it’s whether the facility had a reasonable plan to prevent it and followed that plan when risk increased.
Families frequently run into common patterns:
- A warning sign was present (mobility decline, dizziness, medication changes, repeated near-falls), but the care approach didn’t reflect it.
- Staff response appears delayed or inconsistent after alarms, call button requests, or reported concerns.
- Environmental hazards—like bathroom safety issues, lighting problems, or unsafe transfer setup—weren’t corrected despite being observable.
Pennsylvania courts evaluate these cases through the lens of reasonable care and documented compliance. That’s why early evidence matters.


