Murfreesboro-area facilities serve a wide range of residents—some with mobility limitations from arthritis, stroke recovery, or post-surgery weakness. In many Tennessee nursing home fall cases, the turning point is whether the facility had timely notice that additional supervision or safer transfer assistance was needed.
Common local patterns we see include:
- Shift handoff gaps: residents who require two-person transfers or gait assistance but aren’t consistently reassessed after staffing changes
- Inconsistent response to mobility updates: care plans that lag behind real-world decline (more falls after medication changes, for example)
- Walkway and bathroom safety issues: slick floors, poor lighting, cluttered common areas, or inadequate grab-bar use
Falls aren’t always avoidable—but when the facility had warning signs and didn’t adjust care accordingly, that’s where legal claims may be possible.


