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Nursing Home Injuries: Legal Help for Families
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April 2022: The MDL Paraquat class action judge will have a status conference on April 1st to review where the litigation is headed and how best to take the bellwether lawsuits forward for trial in November 2022. 44 new paraquat lawsuits have been added to the MDL in the last two weeks. At this pace, April 2022 will be the busiest month for new files yet. Last week, the parties filed their class-action bellwether picks with the Paraquat MDL judge. Those choices, however, have not been made public.
May 2022: In the last month, over 50 new cases have been added to the Paraquat Lawsuit Multidistrict Litigation (MDL). A group of six patients was recently selected by the Paraquat MDL court for the initial Paraquat Parkinson's disease bellwether trials. As a result, the first trial in November 2022 is approaching soon. The strategy is to select 16 paraquat claims from among the almost 1000 Parkinson's disease litigation claims filed. Following some limited fact discovery in these instances, paraquat attorneys on both sides submitted a preference list to the MDL court, ranking the 16 cases in order of priority. Attorneys for plaintiffs seek the finest facts for their clients, while defense attorneys want the worst. The judge whittled the list down to six Paraquat claims based on these rankings.
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Anyone who experienced sexual abuse or harassment by Mr. Janzen should contact us now. Seek the justice and closure you deserve. Significant compensation may be available. Free Claim Review.
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If your loved one suffered a physical injury in a Pennsylvania nursing home—and you suspect neglect, understaffing, or unsafe conditions—you don’t have to figure this out alone.
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Michigan lawmakers introduced bipartisan legislation to give sexual abuse victims more time to sue for damages, expanding the civil statute of limitations from age 28 to 52 and allowing a two-year window for retroactive lawsuits. The measures would allow victims to pursue lawsuits previously barred by time limits. Government entities could not claim immunity if they failed to act on prior misconduct. Vermont, Maine, and Maryland have already removed such limits. The push follows decades-old abuse reports, including convictions of Catholic clergy and Larry Nassar, a former Michigan State doctor. The legislation also proposes a "Survivors Bill of Rights" to ensure access to advocates, counselors, and legal support.
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Visiting a loved one in prison is already an emotional challenge. If you’ve faced sexual abuse while trying to visit, the pain and trauma can feel overwhelming. No one should endure such an experience, especially while trying to provide support to an incarcerated family member. We are dedicated to helping individuals who have suffered sexual abuse during prison visits. We understand the unique emotional, legal, and financial struggles that come with these traumatic events. Our compassionate team is here to support you every step of the way, ensuring that your rights are protected and your voice is heard.
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Falls commonly trace back to conditions families never see during a quick visit—like what happens on night shift, during meals, or when staffing is thin. Neglect-related fall cases often involve one or more of the following:
Inadequate staffing and supervision. Too few aides means residents wait longer for help, attempt to walk alone, and don’t get assisted transfers. Pennsylvania has adopted staffing standards and ratios intended to improve safety—for example, requirements around direct care hours per resident day and nurse aide coverage.
Failure to follow fall-risk care plans. Many residents are assessed as fall risks, but the facility doesn’t consistently implement interventions (assist with toileting, proper footwear, safe transfers, walker within reach, alarms when appropriate).
Unsafe environment. Wet floors, poor lighting, cluttered pathways, broken handrails, ill-fitting wheelchairs, missing grab bars, and poorly maintained bathrooms can all contribute.
Missed basic care that increases fall risk. Dehydration, malnutrition, unmanaged blood pressure, infections, and medication mismanagement (including sedating drugs) can cause dizziness, confusion, and instability.
Poor documentation and delayed reporting. Families sometimes learn about a fall hours—or even days—later, or receive inconsistent explanations. That’s a red flag worth investigating.
What Families Often Discover
When you contact us, we focus on facts that nursing homes and insurers often try to gloss over:
We obtain and review the complete chart, fall-risk assessments, care plans, CNA flow sheets, and incident reporting. We look for patterns like unanswered call bells, missed toileting assistance, lack of supervision, and failure to implement fall precautions. We investigate staffing levels and corporate policies, identify all responsible parties, and work with appropriate experts when needed. Then we handle communications and pursue settlement—or file suit when that’s what it takes to protect your loved one’s rights.
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Nursing Home Injuries:
Legal Help For Families
Facilities often describe falls as unavoidable. In reality, many serious falls follow warning signs and preventable failures, such as:
A resident is left unattended in a bathroom or shower area. A call light goes unanswered for too long. A high-risk resident is allowed to walk without assistance. A facility doesn’t follow a care plan, fails to use bed/chair alarms when appropriate, or doesn’t provide needed mobility aids. These are the kinds of systemic neglect problems that can turn a manageable risk into a life-changing injury.
Once a resident falls, the “aftercare” matters too. Delayed medical evaluation, failure to monitor for head injury symptoms, or trying to “manage it in-house” instead of sending the resident out can worsen outcomes dramatically.
When your loved one enters a nursing home, you expect basic safety: enough staff on the floor, call bells answered, help with transfers, and hazards removed before someone gets hurt. But in too many Pennsylvania facilities, falls happen after preventable breakdowns in care—like understaffing, missed care plans, poor supervision, and unsafe rooms or hallways.
If your family member suffered a physical injury in a Pennsylvania nursing home—especially from a fall—your family may be able to pursue a claim for abuse, neglect, or negligence and seek compensation for the harm.
Falls in Nursing Homes Aren’t Always “Accidents”
Falls in nursing homes frequently cause serious, visible injuries—exactly the kinds of cases families recognize immediately:
Hip fractures, broken wrists/arms, shoulder fractures, head trauma and brain injury, facial fractures, spinal injuries, deep bruising and lacerations, and a steep decline after hospitalization (loss of mobility, infections, or complications). If your loved one had a documented physical injury after a fall, that injury can be a key foundation for investigating whether neglect played a role.