Not every fall case looks the same. In Russellville and across rural areas of Alabama, the details that matter most commonly involve:
- Transfer and mobility breakdowns: falls during bed-to-chair movement, toileting assistance, or wheelchair/walker use
- Bathroom and hallway hazards: slippery flooring, inadequate lighting, grab-bar issues, or clutter that disrupts safe walking paths
- Staffing and supervision gaps: problems that arise when facilities are short-staffed, rely too heavily on rushed check-ins, or don’t match staffing to residents’ assessed risk
- Care plan not followed: when documented precautions are missing on the shift an injury occurs
- Response after the incident: delayed assessment, incomplete documentation, or failure to follow up on symptoms after a head impact
Even if the facility insists the resident “just fell,” the legal question is whether the facility provided reasonable safeguards for known risks and responded appropriately once the fall occurred.


