Many nursing home falls in Tyler occur during predictable “pressure points,” not random moments—times when staff are moving between tasks, residents are getting assisted to dining areas, or routines change because of staffing coverage.
In these scenarios, families often report patterns like:
- A fall shortly after a transfer (bed-to-chair, chair-to-walker, or bathroom assistance)
- Limited staff at the moment an alarm sounded or a resident needed help
- Notes that don’t match what you see in medical records—especially around mobility, dizziness, or confusion
- Environmental issues that are easy to overlook (lighting, slippery bathroom floors, cluttered hallways, worn flooring)
Your case may turn on whether the facility had a realistic plan for these routine moments—and whether staff followed it.


