Nursing Home Abuse & Neglect

Falls & Lack of Fall Protection

Falls & Lack of Fall Protection

A Fall Is Rarely “Just an Accident”

In nursing homes, falls are one of the most common and most devastating events a resident can experience. While facilities may describe a fall as unavoidable, many occur after clear warning signs were ignored.

Residents who are elderly, medically fragile, cognitively impaired, or recovering from illness require individualized fall prevention plans. When staffing is thin, supervision is inconsistent, or care plans are not followed, the risk of serious harm rises sharply.

A preventable fall can lead to catastrophic injury within seconds.

Senior woman falling down
Philly Skyline
Nursing home healthcare and assisted living

Why Nursing Home Residents Are at High Risk

Many residents enter long term care with conditions that increase fall risk, including:

  • Mobility limitations or muscle weakness
  • Balance disorders
  • Dementia or confusion
  • Medication side effects
  • Recent surgery or hospitalization
  • History of prior falls

These risks are not surprises. Federal and state regulations require nursing homes to assess fall risk on admission and regularly thereafter. Facilities must implement care plans that address supervision, assistive devices, environmental safety, and medication management.

When those protections are not in place, a fall becomes foreseeable.

The Consequences of a Preventable Fall

Falls in nursing homes frequently result in life altering injuries, including:

For elderly residents, even a single fracture can trigger a rapid decline. Complications such as infections, blood clots, pneumonia, or surgical complications can follow. In many cases, a fall marks the beginning of a downward spiral that ends in wrongful death.

What began as a lack of supervision can become a fatal chain reaction.

Worried senior woman
Elderly Woman Holding Handrail for Support stock photo

How These Falls happen?

According to the CDC, 16–27 percent of nursing home falls are due to environmental hazards such as wet floors, poor lighting, incorrect bed height and improperly fitted or maintained wheelchairs.

However, it isn’t just environmental hazards that contribute to falls in nursing homes. Negligence contributing to falls may comprise:

  • Failure to monitor residents
  • Failure to supervise at-risk residents walking in the facility
  • Failure to use proper safeguards
  • Improper assessment of fall risk
  • Damaged or defective walking aids
  • Bed rail malfunction
  • Undertrained staff
  • Improper transfer methods and positioning of residents with limited mobility
  • Medication errors or change in medication — drugs which affect the central nervous system like sedatives and anxiolytics are of particular concern, and significantly increase the risk of falls for up to three days after any change

What Fall Protection Should Look Like

Proper fall prevention requires more than bed alarms or occasional rounding. Effective protection often includes:

  • Individualized fall risk assessments
  • Updated and documented care plans
  • Adequate staffing levels
  • Timely assistance with transfers and toileting
  • Proper use of walkers, wheelchairs, and other mobility aids
  • Environmental safety measures such as clear walkways and appropriate lighting
  • Medication reviews to identify drugs that increase dizziness or sedation
  • Close monitoring after a prior fall

When these steps are skipped or inconsistently applied, residents are left vulnerable.

Nursing home Caregivers walking
Lawyer going through papers

How McEldrew Purtell Investigates Fall Cases

Fall cases require careful reconstruction. Our team examines:

  • Admission assessments and fall risk scores
  • Care plans and updates
  • Staffing levels at the time of the fall
  • Call light response times
  • Medication administration records
  • Surveillance footage when available
  • Incident reports and internal investigations

We work to determine whether the fall was truly unavoidable or the result of preventable failures.

These cases are about more than compensation. They are about accountability and preventing the same harm from happening to someone else.

Speak With a Nursing Home Neglect Attorney

If your loved one suffered a serious injury or died after a fall in a nursing home, you deserve answers. Facilities often move quickly to limit exposure. Early investigation can preserve critical evidence.

McEldrew Purtell represents families in catastrophic injury and wrongful death claims involving nursing home falls and lack of fall protection.

Contact us to discuss what happened and to understand your legal options.

Nursing Home

Learn More

Nursing Home Neglect: 15 Warning Signs Families Can’t Ignore

When you move a parent or loved one into a nursing home, you’re trusting strangers with something irreplaceable: their safety, dignity, and quality of life. Too often, that trust is broken. Chronic understaffing, poor training, and corporate cost-cutting can leave…

Explosion Reported at Bucks County Nursing Home: What Families Need to Know and Do Now

On Tuesday, December 23, 2025, an explosion and fire were reported at Silver Lake Nursing Home / Silver Lake Healthcare Center on Tower Road in Bristol Township, Bucks County. Early reports indicated people may have been trapped, a large emergency…

Genesis Nursing Home Bankruptcy: What It Means for Families with Unpaid Settlements

When a nursing home resident is seriously injured or dies because of neglect, a civil lawsuit and settlement are often the only way families can demand accountability. But for many families with claims against Genesis HealthCare, those hard-won settlements are…

How To Pursue a Nursing Home Wrongful Death Lawsuit

Facing the death of a family member due to nursing home negligence is especially difficult for those left behind. You may have unanswered questions regarding your loved one’s care leading up to their passing.  The majority of wrongful deaths in…

How To Assess a Catastrophic Injury Lawsuit

Any injury can seem devastating, especially when you are hurt in an accident or injured due to someone else’s negligence or bad actions. However, some injuries are severe enough to cause permanent disability and change your way of life forever,…

Signs You May Need a Nursing Home Abuse Lawyer

Sadly, the risk that your loved one is suffering from nursing home abuse is higher than you think. You can look for certain signs to help you identify when this is happening. If you notice any of the signs, you…