While every case is unique, the circumstances often share a pattern: residents are moving through daily routines that caregivers assume are “covered,” but the safeguards break down.
Common situations include:
- Unassisted or inadequately supervised transfers (bed-to-chair, wheelchair-to-toilet) during busy shift periods
- Bathroom and hallway hazards—wet floors, poor traction, cluttered walkways, or lighting that makes obstacles hard to spot
- Wandering and improper response to cognitive decline, including delayed staff intervention when a resident attempts to get up
- Equipment and mobility device problems, such as wheelchairs not properly locked, walkers incorrectly fitted, or assistive devices not used as required by the care plan
- Post-fall monitoring failures, including delayed assessment after a head impact or missed warning signs that should have triggered escalation
In Green and nearby communities, families also report a second layer of concern: when the resident’s condition requires frequent appointments or specialist follow-ups after the fall, the facility may stop focusing on what happened and start focusing on what it documented. That’s why early legal review matters.


