Every facility is different, but the situations we frequently see in Illinois long-term care cases tend to cluster around predictable problems. In Marion, families often report falls that occur during routine moments, such as:
Bathroom and transfer risks
Falls during toileting, showering, or transfers often involve missed or insufficient assistance. A resident who needs help standing, pivoting, or using mobility aids may still be left to manage steps independently if staffing is tight or if the care plan isn’t followed.
Medication-related balance issues
After a fall, it’s common to learn that dizziness, sedation, blood pressure changes, or pain medication side effects may have affected gait and alertness. When medication timing or monitoring isn’t handled appropriately, a facility can miss warning signs.
Wandering or unsafe attempts to move
For residents with dementia or cognitive impairment, a facility must use practical risk controls. Falls can occur when a resident attempts to get up alone, tries to move toward hallways or common areas, or enters an unsafe route without timely intervention.
Equipment and environmental hazards
Some falls involve unsafe conditions—such as slippery flooring, poor lighting, obstacles in pathways, broken assistive devices, or grab bars that aren’t properly installed or maintained.
When you contact a Marion nursing home accident attorney, we focus on matching the resident’s known risk factors to the facility’s actual practices—before, during, and after the fall.