West Point is a growing Utah community, and like many Wasatch Front areas, nursing home operations can be stretched during shifts with higher workload—admissions, family visit surges, therapy scheduling, and routine care that puts transfers and mobility assistance on a tight timeline.
That’s where preventable issues can emerge:
- Care plans not kept current after a change in mobility, medication effects, or cognition
- Transfer assistance not matching the resident’s assessed fall risk
- Staff response delayed when an alarm or call system should have triggered quicker action
- Environment hazards (poor lighting, cluttered pathways, bathroom safety gaps) that weren’t corrected after earlier concerns
In Utah, facilities are expected to provide appropriate care and supervision consistent with a resident’s needs. When falls happen in patterns—same location, similar circumstances, repeated “near misses”—the legal question becomes whether the facility reacted reasonably before the injury.


