In many nursing home fall matters, the most persuasive evidence isn’t the fall itself—it’s the record of what staff and the facility knew before the incident. For Midvale residents, that often means reviewing how the facility handled predictable risk factors that show up in everyday care:
- Residents who repeatedly reported dizziness, weakness, or trouble walking
- Changes in mobility after medication adjustments or illness
- Transfer assistance problems (bed-to-chair, toileting, wheelchair safety)
- Bathroom and hallway hazards (lighting, wet surfaces, cluttered walkways)
- Inconsistent responses to alarms or call-bell use
Utah’s civil injury timeline rules don’t forgive “we didn’t know” claims if documentation shows the facility should have acted sooner. The goal of a strong nursing home fall case is to connect the dots between warning signs, care-plan decisions, and what happened during the shift.


