Millcreek is a residential community with many families relying on long-term care facilities for loved ones who may have mobility limits, dementia-related behaviors, or medical conditions that affect balance. In that setting, fall cases often hinge on how well the facility adjusted day-to-day staffing and supervision to each resident’s changing needs.
Some of the most common local patterns we see in these cases include:
- Transfer and mobility breakdowns (bed-to-chair, wheelchair positioning, toileting assistance)
- Bathroom-related injuries involving slippery surfaces, poor placement of assistive devices, or inadequate supervision
- Head injury and symptom escalation where monitoring after the fall wasn’t consistent with the resident’s risk level
- Documentation gaps that make it harder to understand what was known at the time—especially when families are trying to piece together shift-to-shift information
Falls are not automatically preventable, but they also aren’t “no-fault” by default when reasonable safeguards could have reduced the risk.


