Buffalo is a suburban community with a mix of long-term care residents and families who may commute between home, work, and medical appointments. That routine affects what happens after a fall in real life:
- Residents may miss follow-ups. After a fracture or head injury, prompt evaluation matters. When documentation shows gaps in monitoring or delays in assessment, it can become central to the case.
- Care coordination is fragmented. Residents may be transported to nearby hospitals/clinics, then returned to the facility with updated instructions. If those instructions aren’t followed, falls and complications can repeat.
- Family access varies by facility. During busy shifts or weekends, families might not be present when key steps occur—incident reporting, neurological checks, medication adjustments, or supervision changes.
These are exactly the moments where negligence can hide in plain sight: not always in the fall itself, but in what the facility did afterward and what it failed to do.


