The moments after a fall can affect both your loved one’s health and the evidence available later. Families often focus on getting treatment, and that’s right—emergency care comes first. But while you’re coordinating care, it helps to document key details while they’re fresh.
Consider doing the following:
- Ask what happened and when: the time of the fall, location (room, hallway, bathroom), and immediate observations.
- Request a copy of incident documentation: the written fall report and any related nursing notes you’re allowed to obtain.
- Record your own timeline: when you were notified, what symptoms appeared, and whether staff described the injury as minor or serious.
- Confirm follow-up care: if there was a head strike, ask what monitoring occurred and for how long.
In many Tega Cay-area cases, the dispute later isn’t only about the fall itself—it’s about the response afterward: how quickly the resident was assessed, what was documented, and whether recommended safety steps were implemented.


