What Happens if My Loved One Died as a Result of Nursing Home Negligence?
Your loved one’s estate could file a wrongful death lawsuit against the nursing home. Even if you start a lawsuit before your loved one’s death, you could convert it to a wrongful death case.
Who Gets the Money from the Lawsuit?
Your loved one, if alive. It can go into a trust for your loved one, or a conservator or guardian might take control of the money on behalf of your loved one.
Who Regulates Nursing Homes?
Several entities at the state and federal levels regulate nursing homes, including the United States Department of Health Human Services and Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services at the federal level. At the state level, several organizations regulate and check nursing home compliance.
When a Nursing Home Violates Regulations, What Happens?
The Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1987, commonly known as the Nursing Home Reform Act, covers nursing homes that accept Medicare and/or Medicaid. Under this act, if you determine a loved one is a victim of the nursing home’s negligence, you could recover compensation. Florida Statutes refer to the Nursing Home Reform Act for part of its rules and regulations.
Does a Nursing Home Have to Have a Minimum Number of Staff?
Not under federal rules. However, Florida requires that each resident has at least 3.6 hours of direct care per week, a minimum of 1 hour of direct care from a licensed nurse per day, and a minimum of 2.5 hours per day by a certified nursing assistant. A Florida nursing home cannot have less than one certified nursing assistant per 20 residents.
Are Bedsores Preventable?
The only unavoidable bedsores are those that happen when the nursing home can prove that it did everything possible to prevent them. However, nursing homes often blame co-morbidities, such as diabetes, incontinence, immobility, renal issues, peripheral vascular disease, and malnutrition for bedsores, not their neglect of patients.
Nursing homes will especially blame co-morbidities for bedsores if a resident has multiple co-morbidities. However, if the nursing home knows of these co-morbidities—and it should—then it should have taken steps to prevent bedsores in the first place. Otherwise, you could hold the nursing home negligent.
For example, knowing that a patient is incontinent, the nursing home staff should check on your loved one hourly to clean up any accidents. If a resident is immobile, the nursing home should know to turn the resident every 20 minutes so that he or she does not develop bedsores.
How Do I Know If I Have a Case?
Your New Port Richey nursing home negligence attorney will discuss your loved one’s care—or lack of care—and will start an investigation if he or she believes you have a case. The attorney will also determine whether the negligence is the nursing home’s fault only or if others are also responsible for your loved one’s damages. Even if you have nothing but a suspicion right now, you can start documenting the case and contact a nursing home negligence attorney immediately.