In nursing home fall cases, the story usually isn’t “one bad moment.” It’s typically a chain of preventable breakdowns—especially when staffing is stretched, residents’ mobility needs change, or safety procedures aren’t followed consistently.
In the Covington area, many families describe similar patterns after a fall:
- Alarms or call systems that weren’t monitored or weren’t answered quickly enough
- Transfer and mobility support that didn’t match the resident’s documented limitations
- Bathroom and hallway hazards (poor lighting, slick surfaces, missing grab bars) that weren’t corrected
- Care plan gaps—updates weren’t made after a change in medication, dizziness, or balance
- Inconsistent supervision during shift changes or high-activity times
Not every fall is preventable. But when the facility had notice of risk and still didn’t act reasonably, Washington law allows families to seek compensation for injuries and losses.


