In the Coatesville area, many older adults receive care in settings that serve busy, multi-step daily routines—meals, medication times, bathing/toileting, physical therapy, and mobility assistance. Falls often occur during predictable “high-movement” moments, especially when residents require more help than the shift can reliably provide.
Common Coatesville-area scenarios we see in fall investigations include:
- Bathroom and hallway injuries: slippery surfaces, poor visibility, clutter around assisted routes, or missing grab-bar support.
- Transfers and mobility transitions: moving from bed to chair, wheelchair to walker, or toileting assistance without sufficient staff support.
- Wandering and getting up unsafely: residents with dementia or memory impairment attempting to stand or exit without the level of supervision their risk requires.
- Medication-related balance changes: falls tied to dosing timing, side effects, or failure to monitor after medication adjustments.
Even when a fall seems “unavoidable,” Pennsylvania claims often turn on whether the facility used reasonable safeguards for the resident’s known risks and responded correctly once the incident occurred.


