Greenville is home to a mix of long-term care facilities serving older adults from across eastern North Carolina. In practice, fall risk can rise when residents have complex needs—mobility limits, dementia, medication side effects, or recent surgeries—and when day-to-day operations don’t match those needs.
Common Greenville-area scenarios we see include:
- Transfer problems: residents needing two-person assistance who aren’t consistently provided it during busy shifts.
- Bathroom and hallway hazards: poor lighting, slippery surfaces, cluttered routes, or equipment left in walkways.
- Wheelchair and device issues: brakes not engaged, improper footwear, walkers/wheelchairs not adjusted to the resident.
- After-hours care gaps: when staffing is leaner, monitoring and timely response to alarms can lag.
- Wandering and unsafe attempts to self-transfer: particularly for residents with cognitive impairments.
Falls aren’t always preventable—but they are preventable when a facility fails to follow reasonable safety practices for the resident’s known risks.


