In Georgetown’s suburban setting, many families rely on consistent routines—regular check-ins, predictable medication schedules, and familiar caregivers. In nursing homes, however, residents are affected by constant changes: shift coverage, CNA turnover, therapy schedules, and transport between rooms.
When those “handoffs” aren’t handled properly, falls can become more likely. Common Georgetown-area scenarios we see include:
- A resident needs assistance with transfers, but help is delayed during shift change
- Staff rely on outdated mobility notes instead of the current care plan
- A new medication is introduced, but fall-risk monitoring doesn’t increase
- A resident returns from therapy, and the facility doesn’t reassess balance or fatigue before walking


