In suburban communities around the Wasatch Front—including Woods Cross—many residents in assisted living and skilled nursing facilities are active throughout the day: walking to common areas, using hallways and bathrooms, and transferring from chairs or beds. When a facility’s routines don’t match a resident’s mobility level, falls can happen during ordinary, predictable moments—not just during “random” events.
Families often notice patterns such as:
- Staff relying on a resident to ambulate independently despite known balance issues
- Transfers handled too quickly during busy shift transitions
- Alarms triggered but not acted on promptly
- Unsafe bathroom conditions (wet floors, grab bars not properly used, poor lighting)
- Outdated or inconsistent fall-risk precautions that aren’t followed during the day
When falls occur in these settings, the legal question typically becomes whether the facility responded like a reasonable care provider would have—based on what it knew at the time.


