In many nursing home fall cases, the question isn’t whether a fall happened. It’s whether the facility had a fair opportunity to prevent it—and whether the right safeguards were actually in place when risks increased.
In Stoughton-area facilities, common contributing factors we look for include:
- Care plan changes not matched to real mobility needs, especially after medication adjustments or after a resident becomes less steady
- Gaps in assistance during peak activity periods (mealtimes, shift changes, and after therapy sessions)
- Environmental issues that matter in everyday routines—bathroom safety, lighting, footwear policies, and safe transfer support
- Delayed or inconsistent response to alarms or call-for-assistance systems
Wisconsin cases often come down to documentation: what the facility knew, what it wrote down, and what staff did (or failed to do) in the hours before and after the fall.


