In the hours after a fall, documentation can quietly shape the outcome. Facilities may produce incident summaries quickly, but the details that matter—timing, observations before and after the event, how staff handled the resident’s risk factors, and what was communicated to families—may be incomplete or inconsistent.
In California, injury claims often depend heavily on records created close to the incident. That’s why Piedmont families benefit from acting early:
- Ask for copies of the incident report and relevant nursing documentation
- Request the resident’s care plan and fall-risk assessment records
- Track who you spoke with, what you were told, and when
If the injury involved a head impact, fractures, or a sudden decline afterward, the story may evolve in medical notes. Your legal strategy should account for that—not just the moment of the fall.


