Edmonds families frequently deal with facilities that serve an aging community where residents may also have schedules and routines influenced by frequent visitors, community outings, and day-to-day transitions (meals, therapy, toileting, and mobility assistance). In practice, that can create predictable “pressure points” where falls occur—especially during busy shift changes and when residents are moved between rooms, dining areas, or activity spaces.
We commonly see issues tied to:
- High-traffic movement inside the facility (transfers during meal times, therapy sessions, or shift handoffs)
- Inconsistent assistance with transfers (wheelchair-to-bed, bathroom transfers, and walker/wheelchair use)
- Environmental hazards that may be overlooked when staff are busy (wet floors, poor lighting in hallways, clutter near common pathways)
- Delayed recognition of injury symptoms (particularly after head impacts or injuries that look minor at first)
When these factors show up alongside documentation gaps—like missing incident notes or incomplete monitoring—families need legal help that can translate the record into a clear negligence theory.


