While every facility is different, many fall patterns show up across Texas long-term care settings—particularly when residents are dealing with mobility limits, diabetes-related neuropathy, balance problems, or cognitive impairment.
In day-to-day life around Socorro, families often describe similar circumstances:
- Assistance gaps during high-need times (early mornings, shift changes, toileting windows)
- Transfers that require more staff support than the care plan reflects
- Bathroom hazards such as slick surfaces, poor lighting, or grab-bar placement that doesn’t match how a resident moves
- Wandering or getting up unassisted when supervision protocols aren’t consistently followed
- Medication and alertness changes that weren’t properly monitored after adjustments
Falls aren’t always preventable. But when reasonable safeguards—staffing, supervision, assistive equipment, and an individualized plan—aren’t implemented, the result can be a preventable injury.


