In Texas, nursing homes and skilled-care facilities handle fall incidents as both a medical event and a compliance issue. That means the paper trail can make or break a family’s ability to prove what happened.
In practice, families often notice patterns in Universal City-area cases:
- Shift-to-shift inconsistencies in what staff recorded (who assisted, what device was used, whether the call light was answered).
- Gaps between the fall and meaningful assessment, especially when the resident hits their head, complains of pain, or shows changes in mobility.
- Care plan mismatches—for example, a resident’s known fall risk isn’t reflected in the level of supervision or transfer assistance actually provided.
A good elder fall injury lawyer doesn’t just ask whether a fall occurred. We examine whether the facility met the standard of care for a resident’s known risks—and whether its documentation supports (or undermines) that claim.


