Easley is a growing upstate community, and many residents live in facilities that serve a wide catchment area. In practice, that can mean higher turnover among staff, frequent care-plan adjustments, and shifting routines—especially for residents recovering from illness or changes in mobility.
When falls happen in this environment, the pattern is often not a single “bad moment.” It’s commonly the result of system-level issues such as:
- residents not being matched to the right level of assistance after changes in condition
- inconsistent use of fall-prevention strategies (alarms, supervision, assistive devices)
- delayed escalation when a resident shows dizziness, weakness, or confusion
- unsafe environmental conditions (poor lighting, cluttered walkways, worn flooring)
These are the kinds of problems we examine closely—because liability depends on what the facility knew, what it documented, and what it did (or didn’t do) before and after the fall.


