In and around Seabrook, many residents rely on routine schedules—medication times, transfer assistance, hallway mobility, and bathroom safety checks. When those routines break down, falls can happen quickly.
After a fall, facilities may produce incident summaries that feel incomplete or heavily generalized (“the resident fell,” “unwitnessed fall,” “resident has a history”). What matters is what was known before the fall: prior dizziness, mobility limitations, fall risk assessments, medication changes, and whether staff followed the care plan.
Because Texas claims can turn on timing and documentation, families benefit from acting early—requesting the right records and preserving evidence before it disappears.


