While every facility is different, we see recurring patterns in the Willamette Valley and Central Oregon-adjacent communities like Albany—especially when residents are coping with chronic conditions common in long-term care.
Common scenarios include:
- Transfer-related falls: residents attempting to move to a chair, toilet, or bed without the level of assistance identified in their care plan.
- Bathroom and doorway hazards: slick surfaces, poor lighting, obstructed pathways, or missing assistive equipment that makes safe mobility difficult.
- Worsening balance and medication effects: dizziness, sedation, or changes in medication timing that increase fall risk.
- Monitoring gaps after high-risk events: falls that occur soon after a change in behavior, cognition, or mobility—when staff should have heightened observation.
In Albany, families often tell us the same thing: the facility’s initial explanation can sound plausible, but the timeline doesn’t match what the resident experienced afterward. That’s why we treat these cases as evidence-driven from the start.


