In many Pueblo communities, long-term care facilities run on tight schedules—medication rounds, meals, shift changes, and transport to appointments. Those periods can be when supervision and staffing strain are most noticeable.
Families often tell us the fall occurred around:
- shift change or handoff
- late-day toileting or bathing routines
- after a resident’s condition “seemed a little off”
- moments when staff were assisting multiple residents at once
While no facility can prevent every fall, Colorado law expects reasonable steps to protect residents based on their assessed risks. If a resident needed extra support for transfers, toileting, mobility, or confusion-related safety—but didn’t receive it—those gaps can matter.


