In and around Newburgh, many residents have conditions that make falls more likely: arthritis, neuropathy, post-stroke weakness, vision problems, and dementia. But those risks don’t automatically create legal liability.
What matters is how a facility manages day-to-day hazards that commonly show up in long-term care settings:
- residents needing two-person assists during transfers
- wheelchair and walker fit issues
- toileting routines where help arrives late or inconsistently
- medication-related dizziness or sedation effects
- slippery bathrooms, poor lighting, or broken/uneven flooring
- unsafe responses after a head impact (when “we’ll monitor” isn’t enough)
In Newburgh-area facilities, families often describe a familiar pattern: the fall happens during a busy shift, staff documentation later becomes vague, and key questions—who knew the resident was high-risk, and what safeguards were actually in place—go unanswered.


