While falls can happen anywhere, Clermont residents often ask us about patterns we frequently see in Florida long-term care environments:
- Post-hospital transitions: Residents coming from the ER after a medical episode (dehydration, infection, medication adjustment) may arrive with new fall risks. Facilities must update supervision and care plans.
- Heat, hydration, and medication effects: Florida residents can be more vulnerable to dizziness and weakness due to dehydration or medication side effects—issues that require monitoring and prompt adjustments.
- Busy facility routines: When daily schedules are tight, assistance with transfers (bed-to-chair, toileting, mobility support) can be delayed—sometimes long enough for a preventable fall to occur.
- Documentation gaps: Families in Clermont frequently report that incident details are vague or inconsistent. Clear records matter in Florida cases because they show what staff observed, what they did, and how quickly they escalated concerns.
If the facility knew the resident was at risk—or should have known—it may have had a duty to put safeguards in place and follow through when symptoms appeared.


