Many people assume a fall is simply “bad luck.” But in long-term care settings, repeated preventable risks can turn an ordinary day into a serious injury.
In our experience with Georgia cases, the facts often come down to whether the facility matched care to the resident’s real needs—mobility limits, balance issues, dementia-related behaviors, or medication side effects.
Common patterns we see in cases from the Forest Park area include:
- Care plan gaps: the plan says one level of assistance, but day-to-day care doesn’t reflect it.
- Transfer problems: residents who need two-person assistance are moved with less help than required.
- Post-fall response: delays in assessment after a head impact, or insufficient monitoring when symptoms worsen.
- Environmental hazards: slippery flooring, poor lighting in hallways/bathrooms, cluttered walkways, or equipment not maintained.


