While every facility is different, many fall cases in Kentucky share practical, real-world patterns. In settings where residents may be recovering from illness, adjusting to new medications, or navigating chronic mobility limits, falls often occur during:
- Transfers (bed-to-chair, toilet use, wheelchair transfers) when assistance is delayed or the care plan isn’t followed
- Bathroom incidents, including slippery surfaces, poor grab-bar placement, or transfers that require more help than staffing allows
- Mobility and gait changes after medication adjustments or progression of conditions like neuropathy or balance disorders
- Wandering and unsafe attempts to get up, especially for residents with dementia or confusion
- Environmental hazards, such as cluttered walkways, lighting issues, or equipment that isn’t maintained
In Berea, where many families work and manage responsibilities while also traveling to visit, timing matters. The sooner you document what you observe and request records, the easier it is to identify how the incident was handled—and whether the facility missed preventable safeguards.


