In an urban riverfront community like Covington, long-term care residents are often transported within the facility for meals, activities, therapy, and medical appointments—or moved between rooms and care areas multiple times a day. Those frequent transitions raise the stakes when:
- staffing is stretched during peak meal/medication windows
- residents need two-person transfers but only one caregiver is available
- wheelchairs, walkers, and gait belts aren’t checked or fitted properly
- call bells, alarms, or mobility aids aren’t used consistently with a resident’s plan of care
Many fall claims aren’t about one obvious misstep. They’re about patterns: a care plan that doesn’t match reality, inconsistent assistance, or supervision that doesn’t account for known risks.


