While every situation is unique, many Pullman and Eastern Washington cases share patterns tied to staffing realities, resident mobility needs, and how facilities handle day-to-day risk.
Common scenarios we see include:
- Missed or delayed assistance during transfers (bed-to-wheelchair, wheelchair-to-toilet, or repositioning)
- Bathroom and hallway hazards such as wet floors, poor lighting, obstructed walkways, or unsafe grab-bar placement
- Mobility and medication-related balance problems where the care plan didn’t match the resident’s actual fall risk
- Wandering or attempt-to-stand incidents for residents with cognitive impairment when supervision and protocols aren’t followed
- After-fall response issues like insufficient monitoring after a head strike, inconsistent vital checks, or incomplete incident documentation
In a smaller community where families may check in between shifts or after commuting, timing and communication gaps can become part of the story. That’s why we help families preserve the timeline and connect it to the facility’s records.


