In the days following a fall, families in Johnstown commonly report patterns like these:
- The facility emphasizes that falls are “expected,” but details about risk screening or care-plan updates are thin.
- Communication is delayed or inconsistent—especially when head injuries, dizziness, or sudden behavior changes are involved.
- Documentation appears polished after the fact, while early notes (shift logs, incident timing, supervision details) are harder to obtain.
- Medical follow-up happens, but the resident’s pain control, monitoring frequency, or mobility restrictions don’t seem to match what the care plan required.
Those early impressions matter. In Colorado, the legal system looks closely at whether a facility met its duty to provide reasonable care—not whether a fall was possible.


