Lighthouse Point is a suburban coastal community where many residents spend time around busy common areas—hallways, dining rooms, therapy spaces, and bathroom routes that can involve tight turns, flooring transitions, and frequent movement throughout the day. In that environment, small breakdowns in supervision or safety planning can have outsized consequences.
We commonly see fall claims where the issue isn’t that a fall was “impossible,” but that the facility’s systems didn’t fit the resident’s real-world risks—especially during peak activity periods like:
- After meal times and medication rounds (when balance can change)
- Transfer periods (bed-to-wheelchair, wheelchair-to-toilet)
- Busy shift handoffs (when communication may lag)
- Visits and family presence (which can unintentionally increase wandering or confusion)
When staffing levels, training, or care plans don’t match the resident’s assessed needs, falls can occur—and the aftermath can be worsened by how the facility documents and responds.


