Calera’s mix of suburban neighborhoods and nearby commuting routes means many families rely on long-term care facilities where residents are transported, scheduled for therapies, moved between rooms, and assisted during busy shift changes. Those routine movements can increase risk when:
- staffing levels don’t match residents’ transfer needs (bed-to-chair, toileting, wheelchair transfers)
- call lights and response times aren’t adequate during high-demand periods
- staff aren’t consistently trained on updated care plans
- common areas (hallways, bathrooms, therapy spaces) aren’t maintained to reduce trip hazards
In a serious fall—especially one involving a head strike—what matters is often what happened before and after the incident: risk screening, supervision, documentation, and whether the facility escalated care appropriately.


