Clarksburg families often deal with the practical realities of a mid-size community: residents may be transferred between facilities, clinics, and hospitals, and records can arrive in pieces (incident notes first, then follow-up medical documentation later). That makes early organization especially important.
Common local scenario patterns we see include:
- Falls after medication changes or adjustments tied to dizziness, weakness, or sedation
- Bathroom and transfer-related incidents in rooms with limited space or aging fixtures
- Delayed responses to alarms or call buttons, particularly after shift changes
- Care plan gaps—when a resident’s mobility or fall risk escalates but the plan doesn’t keep up
The goal isn’t to argue “who’s at fault” in the abstract. It’s to show what the facility knew (or should have known) about fall risk and what it did—or didn’t do—before and after the fall.


