Frisco is a fast-growing North Texas community, and that growth can increase pressure on local long-term care operations—especially around staffing coverage, scheduling, and responding to residents with complex needs.
In practice, families in the area often ask about falls that occur during:
- Busy shift changes (when call lights, transfers, and toileting assistance can get delayed)
- High-traffic common areas where residents navigate hallways, dining spaces, and activity rooms
- Routine “transfer” moments—bed to wheelchair, wheelchair to toilet, or walker-to-stand—when the care plan doesn’t match the resident’s actual fall risk
- After outings or family visits—when unfamiliar routines, clothing, footwear, or temporary staffing coverage can affect supervision
Falls aren’t always preventable, but when a facility’s systems fail—care plans aren’t followed, risk is underestimated, or response after a head injury is slow—Texas law allows injured residents and families to seek compensation.


