In the Omaha metro area, families often describe similar patterns in case reviews: the fall happens during routine movements—getting to a restroom, transferring from bed to a wheelchair, or walking with a walker—and the documentation afterward doesn’t match what families later learn in the hospital.
Common Omaha-area scenarios we investigate include:
- Transfer assistance gaps: a resident needs two-person support, but staffing levels or understaffed shifts result in inadequate help.
- Inconsistent fall-risk updates: care plans don’t reflect changes in mobility, dizziness, or confusion.
- Delayed observation after head impact: residents with anticoagulants or dementia may not report symptoms clearly.
- Environmental issues that worsen in busy hallways: clutter, poor lighting, or equipment left in walk paths can increase trip risk.
These issues matter legally because a “bad outcome” alone isn’t enough—what drives a claim is whether the facility’s safety procedures and post-fall monitoring were reasonable for the resident’s known risk.


