In Moore, many residents come from neighborhoods with familiar layouts and caregiver routines, but a facility is different: hallways may be longer, bathrooms are standardized, and transfers often happen in a predictable flow. That’s precisely why fall prevention is supposed to be systematized—care plans, staffing coverage, equipment checks, and monitoring should match each resident’s mobility, balance, and cognitive needs.
A fall may not automatically mean negligence, but it can raise serious questions when the facility:
- continued the same transfer approach despite known balance or mobility issues
- didn’t adjust supervision after a change in condition
- relied on “someone will be there” coverage without adequate staffing
- missed red flags after a head strike or a complaint of dizziness
In Oklahoma, proving a nursing facility’s responsibility generally turns on whether reasonable care was provided and whether the facility’s failure contributed to the injury. The practical work is showing what the staff did, what they documented, and what they should have done instead.


