Nursing home falls aren’t random. In Tennessee facilities, families commonly run into issues tied to day-to-day operations—transfer routines, nighttime supervision, and how quickly staff adjust when a resident’s condition changes.
In Goodlettsville and Sumner County, the most common scenarios families report include:
- Bathroom and transfer mishaps (slips, loss of balance during toileting, or transfers not supported the way the care plan requires)
- Alarm and call-response breakdowns (alarms triggered but response is delayed, incomplete, or not documented)
- Care plan lag after medication changes, dizziness, or mobility decline
- Environmental hazards (poor lighting during evening hours, cluttered walkways, unsafe grab-bar placement, or worn flooring)
Even when staff say “it was unavoidable,” Tennessee claims often turn on whether the facility had notice of fall risk and whether precautions were actually in place when they mattered.


