Duncanville residents often rely on nearby long-term care facilities, and the daily routines can look “predictable” from the outside—scheduled meals, common areas, hallway activities, and transfers between rooms. But falls frequently happen during those routine moments:
- restroom and bathing transfers
- trips during mobility aid use (walkers, canes, wheelchairs)
- falls in rooms where night lighting is limited or pathways change
- incidents during shift changes when staffing levels are stretched
Even in well-run facilities, residents may have conditions common in older adulthood—balance issues, neuropathy, weakness after illness, vision changes, or cognitive impairment. The key legal question is whether the facility planned and monitored care in a way that matched the resident’s real risk.


