In suburban and residential communities like Harrison, many families spend weekdays coordinating care, appointments, and transportation schedules. That reality can affect what staff do and how often the facility is able to provide hands-on assistance during high-risk moments.
Common fall patterns we see in Ohio long-term care settings include:
- Transfers without adequate support (bed-to-chair, chair-to-toilet, wheelchair-to-bed)
- Delayed assistance during peak staffing times (shift changes, therapy windows, meal periods)
- Inconsistent use of mobility devices or failure to match equipment to the resident’s needs
- Bathroom and hallway hazards that become more dangerous when a resident has reduced balance, vision, or cognition
Even when a fall is “tragic but explainable,” the legal question is whether the facility provided reasonable safeguards for the resident it had—not the generic resident it hoped for.


