In suburban communities like Richmond, many residents spend more time moving through common areas and routines—bathroom trips, wheelchair-to-chair transfers, therapy sessions, and meals. Falls often happen around those predictable “high-movement” moments, especially when:
- staffing is stretched during peak shifts
- residents need hands-on assistance but care plans aren’t followed consistently
- mobility changes after illness or medication adjustments aren’t reflected in day-to-day supervision
When a fall occurs, the key question becomes whether the facility planned for the resident’s functional needs and provided the right help at the right time—not whether the resident was simply “unsteady.”


