Many falls in long-term care don’t start with a “mystery slip.” They often occur during predictable moments—when residents need help transferring after a toileting trip, moving between a wheelchair and bed, or walking with assistive devices.
In the Anoka area, families frequently notice patterns that matter legally:
- Shifts that run short: fewer aides on duty can mean delayed response times and rushed assistance.
- Inconsistent transfer support: a resident may be transferred one way on one day and differently on another.
- Care plan gaps: a written plan may exist, but the staff workflow doesn’t match it.
- Quick changes in condition: dizziness, weakness, or confusion can appear after medication changes, dehydration, or illness—then a fall follows.
These details matter because Minnesota negligence claims typically focus on whether the facility used reasonable care for resident safety under the circumstances—not whether a fall was “preventable in theory.”


