In Bel Aire and across the Wichita area, families often tell us the same thing: the facility described the fall as unavoidable, and the communication afterward was confusing or inconsistent. But nursing home fall cases are frequently about whether the facility matched its care to the resident’s actual risk.
Falls can be linked to preventable breakdowns such as:
- not updating fall-risk plans after changes in mobility or cognition
- insufficient assistance during transfers (bed, wheelchair, toilet)
- inadequate monitoring after a “minor” stumble that later worsened
- environmental hazards that were foreseeable (lighting issues, slippery surfaces, cluttered paths)
A key point for Kansas families: you generally don’t want to rely on the facility’s initial story. Early evidence can disappear quickly—shift logs may be overwritten, surveillance may be retained briefly, and medical notes may be revised as events are recharacterized.


