In suburban Brentwood, many residents enter care with complex mobility needs—walkers, wheelchairs, medication changes, post-hospital weakness, or cognitive impairment. When a fall happens, the most important question isn’t just how it occurred. It’s whether the facility accurately reflected day-to-day risks in the care plan and whether staff followed the plan.
That often means looking closely at:
- whether the facility updated fall-risk assessments after medication or condition changes
- whether transfer assistance matched the resident’s assessed abilities
- whether bathroom and hallway safety steps were properly implemented and maintained
- whether staff responded promptly when alarms were triggered or assistance was requested
Tennessee nursing facilities are expected to follow established standards of care. When records show the risk was known (or should have been known) and prevention measures weren’t carried out, liability becomes a real issue—not a talking point.


