Every facility has its own routines, but fall patterns tend to repeat. In Hobart, families frequently report concerns that fall cases often hinge on:
- Transfer and toileting assistance: Falls during bed-to-chair moves, wheelchair transfers, or toileting—especially when staff are stretched thin or the care plan is not followed.
- Seasonal mobility and fatigue: Wisconsin winters and colder months can increase stiffness, balance issues, and fatigue for residents returning from appointments, activity areas, or therapy.
- Hallway and common-area movement: Trips and stumbles in busier spaces—near activity rooms, dining areas, or where residents move between therapy and their units.
- After-fall monitoring gaps: Head impacts, bruising, or sudden changes in alertness that weren’t treated as urgent or weren’t documented consistently.
A fall can look “minor” at first and still have serious consequences—pain, loss of independence, additional medical visits, or complications that develop over days.


