Fountain is a growing suburban community in Colorado Springs’ orbit, with many residents relying on long-term care facilities for mobility and memory support. In these settings, falls often involve predictable “day-to-day” moments—getting up after meals, walking to common areas, transferring from beds or wheelchairs, or using bathrooms that aren’t set up for someone’s exact mobility needs.
Families in the Fountain area commonly report two frustrating patterns after a fall:
- The injury is treated as a one-off accident, even when the resident had known fall risk factors (prior near-falls, balance issues, dementia-related behaviors, medication side effects).
- The response timeline doesn’t match what you’d expect, such as delayed assessments after a head strike, minimal monitoring afterward, or incomplete documentation of symptoms.
Those details matter legally in Colorado, because liability turns on whether the facility used reasonable care for resident safety—not whether a fall was “expected” in the abstract.


