Dunwoody is a suburban community where many older adults spend their days in structured care settings—yet the same routines that feel safe at home can become risky in a facility if procedures don’t match real mobility needs.
Common Dunwoody-area scenarios we see in fall cases include:
- Bathroom and transfer incidents during toileting, bathing, or getting to and from a wheelchair.
- Delayed response after a head impact—when a resident appears “okay” at first but later shows confusion, worsening pain, or balance problems.
- Falls during high-traffic care windows (shift changes, medication rounds, or meal assistance) when staffing and supervision may be stretched.
- Wandering or unsafe attempts to move by residents with dementia or cognitive impairment, particularly when door alarms, monitoring protocols, or staff communication are inconsistent.
A key point: in Georgia, the outcome often turns on whether the facility can show it met its duty of reasonable care under the resident’s known risk factors—not whether the fall was unfortunate.


