In Ohio, nursing facilities are expected to provide reasonable care designed to protect residents from foreseeable risks. A fall doesn’t automatically prove wrongdoing—but in Brunswick cases, patterns often emerge such as:
- Transfers without adequate assistance (bed-to-chair, toileting, walker/wheelchair use)
- Missed warning signs (worsening dizziness, confusion, medication side effects)
- Environmental hazards (poor lighting, unsafe bathroom conditions, cluttered or uneven walkways)
- Inconsistent monitoring after a resident reports pain or head impact
Sometimes the injury itself is obvious right away. Other times, complications surface later—like increasing confusion after a head injury or escalating pain that wasn’t treated promptly. Those “later effects” matter legally because they can show how the facility handled symptoms once the fall occurred.


