In a suburban coastal community like Seabrook, residents may spend more time in shared activity spaces—common dining areas, therapy gyms, hallways with foot traffic, and rooms near entryways used throughout the day. That means a facility’s daily workflow matters.
Families frequently report concerns that sound small at first but become legally important:
- Transfers and toileting happening during busy shift handoffs
- Residents moving between rooms while staff are managing multiple residents at once
- Changes in staffing, call-bell response time, or supervision during peak hours
- Temporary facility conditions (wet floors, equipment moved for maintenance, cluttered walkways) that increase slip and trip risks
When a fall occurs in that context, the question becomes: did the facility adapt its care plan and staffing/safety practices to the resident’s real risks?


