North Tonawanda is a community where many families are active in day-to-day caregiving—visiting, checking on routines, and noticing changes quickly. That matters legally because fall injuries frequently involve small, documented decisions made during shifts: whether assistance was provided for transfers, whether fall-risk alerts were followed, and whether post-fall monitoring was adequate.
Even when a resident has medical conditions that affect balance or cognition, facilities still must respond to known risks with appropriate supervision, staffing, and care-plan implementation. When they don’t, a “routine” fall can turn into fractures, head injuries, or complications that worsen over time.


