Many families assume a fall is automatically “unavoidable.” But in Colorado long-term care settings, the legal question is whether the facility used reasonable safeguards based on the resident’s documented needs.
In real Parker-area cases, we often see issues like:
- Transfer problems (bed-to-chair, toileting, wheelchair repositioning) when assistance isn’t provided at the right level or at the right time
- Bathroom and pathway hazards in rooms and common areas—especially where lighting, surfaces, grab bars, or footwear policies aren’t consistent
- Supervision breakdowns for residents who are at risk of getting up unassisted, wandering, or attempting to walk despite mobility limits
- After-fall response failures, such as incomplete incident documentation, delayed monitoring after a head strike, or inconsistent follow-up
These are the points that can matter when you’re trying to determine whether negligence contributed to the injury—not just whether a fall happened.


