Fishers is a fast-growing suburb with busy medical networks, frequent staff turnover, and residents who may spend time in therapy, dining areas, and activity spaces that are designed for mobility—not for every resident’s limitations.
Families commonly report patterns like:
- Missed or delayed reassessment after a resident says they’re dizzy, weak, or in pain.
- Insufficient help with transfers (bed-to-chair, wheelchair-to-toilet) during high-traffic times like mornings and shift changes.
- Care plan drift—where a resident’s increased fall risk from medication changes, recent hospital discharge, or mobility decline isn’t reflected in day-to-day assistance.
- Environmental contributors—such as inadequate lighting in hallways, bathroom safety issues, or equipment that isn’t used consistently.
A fall may involve one moment, but in many nursing home cases, the legal issue is whether the facility’s systems were built to account for the resident’s known risks.


