Manhattan Beach’s lifestyle and infrastructure can create real-world risk factors that show up in long-term care settings, including:
- High turnover of staff and reliance on shift coverage: When staffing gaps occur (even briefly), residents who need help with transfers can be left without timely assistance.
- More complicated mobility needs among residents: Many long-term residents have a mix of balance issues, neuropathy, medication side effects, and mobility limitations—conditions that require consistent supervision and individualized fall prevention.
- Environmental slip-and-trip hazards in older buildings: Facilities may have areas that are difficult to navigate—bathroom flooring, poorly designed transitions, or lighting that doesn’t support safe ambulation.
A fall isn’t automatically negligence. But when the facility’s processes don’t match a resident’s assessed risks, preventable injuries can occur.


