Every facility has residents with changing mobility, balance issues, and medical complexity. In Reedsburg and throughout central Wisconsin, claims often come down to whether the care plan matched the resident’s real needs at the time of the fall.
Common local “real life” patterns we see in these cases include:
- Transfer problems: residents attempting to move to a chair, bed, or bathroom without the assistance level that staff knew they needed.
- Bathroom and hallway hazards: slippery flooring, poor lighting, obstacles near common routes, or inadequate grab-surface support.
- Inconsistent monitoring: short-staffed shifts leading to missed checks, delayed response to alarms, or inadequate post-fall observation.
- Medication-related fall risk: changes in prescriptions or timing that affect dizziness, sedation, or coordination.
A fall isn’t automatically legally “preventable.” But when a facility knew (or should have known) about specific risk factors and still failed to put safeguards in place—or failed to respond appropriately once the fall occurred—that’s where legal responsibility can arise.


