Not every fall is preventable, and facilities may argue that the injury was “unavoidable.” But cases in Talladega often turn on something more concrete: whether the facility followed a resident-specific safety plan and whether staff responded appropriately when risk increased.
Common triggers that can support a claim include:
- Poor fall-risk recognition for residents with mobility limits or cognitive impairment
- Inadequate assistance during transfers, toileting, or mobility support
- Environmental hazards such as slick floors, poor lighting, obstructed pathways, or unsafe flooring in areas where residents must walk
- Medication-related balance problems that staff should have identified and managed
- Delayed or incomplete post-fall care after a head strike, suspected fracture, or unusual behavior
In short: the legal question is usually not “did a fall happen?” It’s whether the facility’s policies, staffing, and day-to-day practices failed to meet the standard of reasonable care for that resident.


