Tomball’s suburban growth means more families are relying on local long-term care options—and facilities can be under pressure to manage changing resident needs, staffing schedules, and turnover. In these settings, falls are often linked to issues such as:
- Delayed or incomplete fall-risk reassessments when a resident’s mobility or cognition changes
- Care plan gaps that don’t match the resident’s current ability to transfer, toilet, or walk safely
- Staffing and shift coverage problems that reduce hands-on assistance during high-risk times (mornings, shift changes, evenings)
- Environmental hazards that are easy to overlook in routine care—slick flooring, poor lighting, cluttered walkways, or malfunctioning equipment
Even when a fall seems “unavoidable,” Texas injury claims often turn on whether the facility took reasonable steps that a prudent caregiver would have taken to reduce the risk.


