Many Morgantown-area residents rely on staff help for transfers, toileting, and safe mobility. That makes certain failure points especially important:
- Medication and alertness changes that weren’t reflected quickly in supervision or monitoring
- Transfer assistance issues—for example, not using proper technique or assistive devices when a resident’s gait or strength has declined
- Environmental hazards in bathrooms, hallways, and day rooms (wet floors, poor visibility, clutter, worn flooring)
- Overreliance on alarms when staff response times and check intervals don’t match the resident’s fall risk
West Virginia cases often hinge on whether the facility had notice of risk and whether its care plan and staffing practices matched the resident’s needs—not just whether the fall occurred.


