Rochester has a mix of busy residential neighborhoods and heavy commercial activity nearby, and that reality follows people into long-term care—especially facilities that handle multiple residents with similar mobility and supervision needs.
In practice, many preventable fall cases we see in New Hampshire nursing settings involve:
- Transfer moments (toileting, bed-to-chair, wheelchair repositioning)
- Bathroom hazards (wet floors, poor visibility, inadequate grab support)
- Wandering and unsafe attempts to “help themselves” for residents with cognitive impairment
- After-fall response problems—when staff fail to escalate quickly after a head impact or worsening symptoms
Every facility has policies on paper. The legal question is whether the care plan, staffing, training, and safety steps matched the resident’s documented risks.


