Many Maryland communities—including College Park—operate around dense residential areas, frequent short-staffed shifts, and residents who may be more active than families expect (especially during common transitions like meal times, medication rounds, and evening wind-down routines).
That matters because falls often cluster around predictable “movement moments,” such as:
- transferring to or from wheelchairs and walkers during busy care windows
- bathroom routines when grab bars, lighting, and floor conditions don’t match resident needs
- evening staffing changes, shift handoffs, or delays in obtaining assistance
- residents attempting to walk independently when they’re cognitively impaired or unsteady
When families are trying to coordinate care from a distance, they may not notice early inconsistencies—like missing monitoring notes or delayed reporting of head impact symptoms. That’s why getting the timeline right early is critical.


