Boerne is a growing community with many residents who require long-term care, and facilities serving the surrounding Hill Country counties often manage high volumes of care. In these environments, preventable fall issues frequently show up in ways families can recognize early—then realize later were ignored.
Common scenarios we see in the Boerne-area include:
- “Walkers and alarms” used inconsistently for residents who needed them every shift, not just “when staff remembered.”
- Medication changes that weren’t matched with updated supervision and fall-risk monitoring.
- Transfer help not matching mobility needs—for example, when a resident required a two-person assist but was moved with less support.
- Environmental hazards in bathrooms, hallways, or rooms—wet floors, poorly lit paths, uneven surfaces, or broken grab bars.
These aren’t “accidents” in the legal sense when the facility failed to follow reasonable safety practices for a resident with known risk.


