A nursing home fall case generally involves an injury that occurred on the premises of a long-term care facility, including skilled nursing facilities and, in some circumstances, assisted living communities. The focus is whether the facility’s conduct fell below the standard of reasonable care for residents’ safety and whether that breach contributed to the injury.
These cases may arise after a resident slips in a bathroom, falls from a wheelchair or walker, attempts to transfer without adequate assistance, wanders and trips, or suffers an injury due to environmental hazards. The incident might also involve more subtle issues, such as failure to evaluate fall risk, improper medication management that affects balance, broken or unsafe flooring, inadequate lighting, or equipment that is not properly maintained.
Sometimes, the facility’s response after the fall becomes part of the legal picture. Delays in medical assessment, inadequate monitoring after a head impact, incomplete or inconsistent incident reports, or failure to follow through with recommended care can all affect the injured person’s outcome and help show why the harm may not have been properly addressed.


