Bedsores, also called pressure ulcers or pressure injuries, are injuries to the skin and underlying tissue caused by prolonged pressure, friction or shearing. They develop fastest in patients with limited mobility, poor nutrition or moisture-related skin breakdown.
In care settings, those risk factors are well known, which is why prevention plans, timely repositioning and prompt wound care are standard expectations in hospitals and long-term care settings. When those basics don’t happen, preventable ulcers can progress from mild redness to deep, infected wounds that threaten a patient’s life.
According to the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), more than 17,000 lawsuits related to bedsores/pressure ulcers are filed each year, making it the second-most common claim following wrongful death. AHRQ also reports that 60,000 patients die every year as a direct result of pressure ulcers.
Whether your loved one developed a pressure injury during a hospital stay or while living in a long-term care community, you may have a viable claim. Our Florida bedsores lawyers or medical malpractice attorneys at Florin|Roebig can evaluate how and why the wound formed, whether prevention protocols were followed and what damages you can recover.
Understanding Bedsore Stages and Warning Signs
Bedsores most frequently appear over bony areas where tissue is compressed between bone and an external surface, where pressure loads are highest. The most common locations include:
- Tailbone: The most frequent site, especially in patients who sit for extended periods
- Hips: Common in patients who lie on their sides
- Heels: Often overlooked but extremely vulnerable, particularly in bedbound patients
- Ankles, shoulder blades and the back of the head: Additional pressure points depending on positioning
Medical professionals classify pressure ulcers by stage, with four stages ranging from early skin discoloration to deep wounds exposing muscle or bone. Using a standardized system helps healthcare providers assess bedsore severity and guide treatment. The four stages include:
- Stage 1: Non-blanchable redness of intact skin. The skin remains unbroken, but pressing on the area doesn’t cause the redness to fade temporarily (blanch). However, persistent redness is a sign that damage has begun beneath the surface.
- Stage 2: Partial-thickness skin loss with exposed dermis (the layer beneath the outer skin). The wound bed appears pink or red and may look like a shallow, open ulcer or a fluid-filled blister. The outer layer of skin has been damaged or lost.
- Stage 3: Full-thickness skin loss. Fat tissue may be visible in the wound, but bone, tendon or muscle isn’t exposed. The ulcer appears as a deep crater and may include tunneling or undermining (damage that extends beneath the surrounding skin).
- Stage 4: Full-thickness skin and tissue loss with exposed or directly palpable bone, tendon or muscle visible. These are the most severe ulcers and often involve extensive destruction, tunneling and undermining. Stage 4 ulcers have extreme risks of serious infection and other life-threatening complications.
Early Warning Signs
Recognizing pressure injuries early can prevent progression to more serious stages. Family members and caregivers should watch for:
- Persistent redness that doesn’t fade when pressed
- Skin that feels warmer or cooler than surrounding areas
- Changes in skin texture (feeling spongy or firm)
- Tenderness or pain in a specific area
- Swelling or discoloration
- Any break in the skin over bony areas
Later-stage wounds may include visible tissue loss, drainage with a foul odor, fever or severe pain. Because early-stage wounds can deteriorate quickly, sometimes within hours or days, staff are expected to identify risks immediately upon admission, assess patients using a standard risk assessment tool (typically the Braden Scale) and implement a comprehensive prevention plan.
Prevention plans can include repositioning schedules, moisture management, nutrition support, pressure-relieving surfaces and rapid escalation to wound-care specialists. Missed repositioning, poor documentation or delayed treatment are frequent failure points that support liability. You can sue when a healthcare provider or medical institution fails to protect a patient from developing severe bedsores.
How Bedsores Happen in Hospitals, Nursing Homes and Assisted Living Facilities
Different care settings have different legal duties, but the fundamental principle never changes—at-risk patients must be protected from preventable harm. The specific failures vary by setting, but patterns of neglect appear consistently across Florida facilities.
In Hospitals
Hospital-acquired pressure ulcers often trace back to:
- Communication failures during nursing shift changes: Critical information about turning schedules or skin conditions doesn’t get passed along.
- Understaffing: Too few nurses available to perform frequent repositioning and skin checks.
- Failure to use specialty mattresses or pressure-relieving devices: Hospitals may not provide or properly utilize available equipment.
- Short-term thinking: Staff may assume brief hospital stays don’t require aggressive prevention, even though ulcers can begin forming within hours.
In Nursing Homes
Long-term care facilities see pressure ulcers develop through:
- Inconsistent turning and repositioning: Residents aren’t moved on schedule, or staff skip turns during busy periods or night shifts.
- Poor incontinence management: Moisture from urine or feces left against the skin accelerates breakdown.
- Missed wound assessments: Staff fail to inspect skin regularly or don’t document changes.
- Documentation that doesn’t match reality: Charts may show repositioning occurred when it didn’t, making it difficult to identify problems.
- Inadequate staffing ratios: Too few certified nursing assistants (CNAs) to meet residents’ needs.
In Assisted Living Facilities
While assisted living facilities (ALFs) aren’t licensed as medical facilities, they still have legal obligations that include:
- Responding appropriately to known risks: If staff observe developing pressure injuries or know a resident has limited mobility, they must take action.
- Arranging higher-level care when needed: ALFs must recognize when a resident’s needs exceed their capabilities and arrange transfer to appropriate care.
- Avoiding neglect: Even in non-medical settings, basic dignity and safety must be maintained.
Five Common Patterns of Neglect
Across all settings, bedsore cases repeatedly show these five failure patterns:
- No individualized risk assessment or prevention plan: Facilities fail to identify at-risk patients or create tailored prevention strategies.
- Repositioning done late or not at all: Turning schedules exist on paper but aren’t followed in practice.
- Poor moisture and incontinence management: Patients left in soiled briefs or bedding for extended periods.
- Inadequate nutrition or hydration support: Malnutrition and dehydration make skin more vulnerable to breakdown.
- Delayed wound-care consults and late transfers to higher care: Early-stage wounds aren’t escalated to specialists, allowing them to worsen.
If these patterns sound familiar in your loved one’s case, you’re not alone. Our legal team routinely handles hospital negligence and long-term care facility cases where these failures led to preventable harm and potentially a medical malpractice claim.
Are Bedsores Preventable? “Avoidable” vs. “Unavoidable”
One of the most common defenses raised by facilities is that a pressure ulcer was “unavoidable” due to the patient’s medical condition. This argument requires careful scrutiny.
The question isn’t whether a patient was high-risk, as many patients are. The question is whether appropriate prevention and treatment measures were actually taken in light of that known risk.
Courts and juries look at whether the facility:
- Conducted timely risk scoring using validated tools like the Braden Scale.
- Implemented consistent turning schedules with documentation proving compliance.
- Monitored nutrition and hydration adequately.
- Performed skin inspections during every shift.
- Executed proper off-loading of vulnerable areas like heels using pillows or boots.
- Escalated care quickly when deterioration appeared
Testing the “Unavoidable” Defense
In practice, we test facility claims of unavoidability by comparing the story in the medical chart to objective evidence, such as:
- Wound photos: Show actual appearance and progression.
- Measurement trends: Document whether ulcers developed or worsened under the facility’s care.
- Laboratory results: Reveal infection, malnutrition or dehydration.
- Vital signs: Indicate systemic problems like sepsis.
- Consultant notes: Show when specialists were (or weren’t) called.
- Staffing and assignment records: Reveal actual nurse-to-patient ratios vs. what the facility claims.
If prevention steps weren’t taken, if staffing was inadequate or if documentation was falsified or incomplete, the “unavoidable” defense rarely withstands scrutiny. Juries are particularly skeptical when facilities claim a wound was unavoidable yet can’t prove they took appropriate preventive measures. When the paper trail doesn’t match bedside reality, that inconsistency becomes evidence of neglect.
Can You Sue a Hospital or Nursing Home for Bedsores in Florida?
Depending on where the wound formed and who was responsible, you may bring a claim under Florida medical malpractice law, nursing home or assisted living resident-rights statutes or general negligence. The appropriate legal pathway depends on the setting and circumstances.
Hospital Cases: Medical Malpractice
In hospital settings, most bedsore cases proceed as medical malpractice claims because they challenge the standard of care delivered by healthcare providers. Medical malpractice law in Florida requires proving that healthcare providers failed to meet accepted standards of professional care.
Nursing Home Cases: Resident Rights and Negligence
In licensed nursing homes, claims often proceed under Florida Statutes Chapter 400, which establishes specific rights for nursing home residents and duties for facilities. These cases may include:
- Violations of statutory resident rights
- Facility negligence
- Breach of duty to provide adequate and appropriate healthcare
Florida law provides nursing home residents with protection beyond general negligence standards, recognizing their particular vulnerability.
Assisted Living Facility Cases: Negligence and Duty to Arrange Care
Under Florida Statutes Chapter 429, assisted living residents also have specific rights, which can make facilities liable for:
- Neglect: Failing to provide a safe living environment with basic care, free from neglect.
- Breach of duty: Failing to provide adequate and appropriate healthcare.
- Failure to arrange appropriate care: Failing to recognize when a resident’s needs exceed the facility’s capabilities and failing to transfer them to a higher level of care.
Choosing the Right Legal Pathway
Each pathway has different procedural requirements. Some require pre-suit investigation steps and expert affidavits before filing, while resident-rights claims focus on whether the facility provided safe, dignified care and protected the resident from neglect. At Florin|Roebig, we sort out the correct legal theory early and choose the approach that gives your case the best leverage and the strongest chance of success.
The Defendants: Who Can You Sue for Pressure Ulcers?
Bedsore cases often involve multiple responsible parties, and identifying all potential defendants is crucial to recovering full compensation. Responsible parties may include:
- Facility operator and owner: The company that runs the hospital or care facility may be liable for system-level failures, such as inadequate staffing and budgeting decisions, failing to implement appropriate policies and procedures and prioritizing profits over patient safety.
- Management company: Some facilities outsource day-to-day operations to a management entity, potentially making these companies liable if they control staffing levels, budgets, hiring and firing decisions or policy implementation.
- Staffing agencies and contractors: Wound care specialists, therapy providers or contract nursing agencies can be held accountable when their personnel fall below accepted standards or fail to provide timely care.
- Individual clinicians: Physicians, nurses and other healthcare providers may share responsibility for allowing wounds to develop or worsen if they personally failed to meet professional standards, such as ignoring obvious signs of skin breakdown or not ordering appropriate interventions.
- Parent companies or corporate entities: In facility chains, liability and insurance coverage may be layered through multiple corporate entities, making it vital to identify parent companies and related entities to ensure claims are brought against all responsible parties.
How We Identify All Responsible Parties
Deciding who to sue isn’t guesswork. We analyze:
- Organizational charts and corporate structures
- Vendor and management agreements
- Payroll and staffing assignment records
- Prior inspection histories and deficiency reports
- Insurance policies and coverage limits
A thorough investigation helps ensure the claim targets the real decision-makers with accountability and resources, not just the name on the building’s sign. The experienced Florida personal injury attorneys at Florin|Roebig will identify all parties responsible to get you the compensation you deserve.
Deadlines and Pre-Suit Requirements: Why Speed Matters
Florida imposes strict filing deadlines for injury and malpractice claims, and some bedsore cases require specific pre-suit notices, expert affidavits or medical reviews before you can file a lawsuit. Understanding which deadline applies to your case is critical. Waiting too long can bar your claim entirely, even if liability is clear and damages are severe.
Statute of Limitations
For nursing home negligence and resident-rights violations, Florida law generally provides two years from the date the injury was discovered or reasonably should have been discovered. However, no lawsuit can be filed more than four years after the incident occurred, regardless of when it was discovered.
However, when a case involves intentional misrepresentation, concealment or fraud by a healthcare provider (defendant), the state allows a seven-year maximum cap. Hospital-based medical malpractice claims also generally carry a two-year statute of limitations from discovery, with additional complexity around when the “discovery” clock starts.
Pre-Suit Investigation Requirements
Florida’s medical malpractice law requires a pre-suit investigation period before filing medical malpractice claims. This process requires the lawyer of the injured party (plaintiff) to send a notice of intent to each possible defendant in the case. Defendants have 90 days to conduct their own investigation, and you can’t file a suit in court during this period. When possible, it’s encouraged to reach a settlement during this 90-day window to avoid initiating litigation.
Why Time-Sensitive Evidence Matters
Beyond legal deadlines, acting quickly protects crucial evidence, including:
- Medical records: While medical records are permanent, audit trails showing who accessed, edited or deleted entries can be lost.
- Staffing data and assignment sheets: Often discarded after short retention periods.
- Surveillance video: Typically recorded over within a few days or weeks.
- Witness memory: Staff members’ memories fade, and they may leave their positions.
The sooner you get a Florin|Roebig bedsores attorney involved, the better we can preserve the evidence that proves your case.
Take Action Now
If you’re unsure which deadline applies to your situation, reach out now for a free case review. We’ll confirm the correct legal pathway, stop the clock where possible through proper legal filings and preserve your rights while evidence is still available.
Our Featured Case Results
Evidence Florin|Roebig Secures Quickly
Speed is crucial in bedsore cases. The evidence that proves neglect is often time-sensitive and can be lost, destroyed or become impossible to retrieve if we don’t act fast. Here’s what we move to preserve immediately:
Complete Electronic Medical Records (EMR) with Audit Trails
We don’t just request the printed chart. We demand the complete electronic record, including metadata showing:
- Who opened each record and when.
- Who edited or modified entries.
- Whether entries were made in real-time or backdated.
- Any deleted or altered documentation.
These audit trails often reveal that charting doesn’t match when care actually occurred.
Wound Records and Documentation
- Detailed measurements and staging assessments
- Wound photographs with metadata (date, time, device information)
- Progress notes from wound-care specialists
- Orders for dressings, debridement and treatments
Staffing and Assignment Data
- Actual nurse-to-patient ratios on each shift
- CNA coverage and assignments
- Documentation of who was specifically assigned to the patient
- Staff call-outs, overtime and understaffing incidents
Facilities often claim adequate staffing in their defense, but assignment records tell the real story.
Care Plans and Risk Assessment Tools
- Braden Scale scores or other validated risk assessments
- Individualized prevention plans
- Documentation of the chosen interventions
- Proof of compliance with prevention protocols
Orders and Consultations
- Wound-care specialist consultations
- Nutritionist involvement
- Infectious disease specialist orders
- Documentation of when transfers to higher levels of care were requested or delayed
Incident Reports and Surveillance
- Internal incident reports filed about the pressure ulcer(s)
- Surveillance camera footage (if available) showing care provided
- Prior complaints or deficiency citations
Witness Interviews
We also move quickly to interview witnesses while memories are fresh. These witnesses may include:
- Family members or others who visited and observed care
- Roommates or other residents who witnessed events
- Agency or contract nurses who may no longer work at the facility and may be more willing to speak honestly
The evidence we secure in the first weeks and months can potentially make or break a bedsore case.
Damages in a Florida Bedsore Case
When facilities fail in their duty to prevent and treat pressure ulcers, the resulting harm can be devastating. Florida law allows recovery of both economic and non-economic damages to compensate for these injuries.
Economic Damages
Tangible financial losses fall under economic damages and can include:
- Hospital and surgical bills: Emergency treatment, hospitalization for complications, surgical debridement or reconstructive procedures.
- Wound-care costs: Specialized dressings, negative-pressure wound therapy and ongoing treatment.
- Medications: Antibiotics for infection, pain management and other necessary drugs.
- Rehabilitation and skilled nursing care: Recovery in skilled nursing facilities or inpatient rehab.
- In-home care: Private nursing, home health aides and medical equipment for ongoing care.
- Future medical expenses: Projected long-term costs for severe injuries requiring continued treatment.
Non-Economic Damages
These losses often account for a substantial part of the claim value, as pressure ulcers cause avoidable suffering, humiliation and isolation. These damages can include:
- Physical pain and suffering: Bedsores, especially in advanced stages, cause severe, ongoing pain.
- Mental anguish and emotional distress: The trauma of developing preventable, painful wounds.
- Loss of dignity: The humiliation of having unsightly wounds that result from neglect.
- Loss of quality of life: Inability to participate in activities, social isolation and depression.
- Disfigurement: Permanent scarring from severe wounds.
Unlike some states, Florida doesn’t cap non-economic damages in medical malpractice claims, as the Florida Supreme Court struck down these limits in 2017. This decision came three years after the Florida Supreme Court found that caps on non-economic damages in medical malpractice wrongful death cases were unconstitutional.
Complications that Can Increase Damages
Serious complications can dramatically increase the severity of your injury and future care costs. Catastrophic injuries often significantly increase the value of your claim. Severe complications can include:
- Osteomyelitis: Bone infection requiring long-term IV antibiotics or surgery
- Sepsis: Life-threatening systemic infection
- Amputation: Loss of limbs due to uncontrolled infection
- Extended hospitalization: Weeks or months in acute care
- Death: When complications prove fatal
Wrongful Death Damages
If a loved one dies from bedsore-related complications, eligible survivors (typically a spouse, children or parents) may seek wrongful death damages, including:
- Loss of companionship and protection
- Mental pain and suffering of survivors
- Lost support and services
- Medical and funeral expenses
Florida’s negligence statute specifies who may recover and what damages are available in a wrongful death claim. The state also doesn’t cap medical malpractice wrongful death cases, no matter the number of claimants, following the Florida Supreme Court’s decision in Estate of McCall v. United States in 2014.
Punitive Damages in Egregious Cases
In cases involving particularly reckless or intentional misconduct, Florida law allows punitive damages designed to punish the wrongdoer and deter similar conduct. However, Florida Statutes §400.0238 caps punitive damages in nursing home cases at three times compensatory damages or $1 million, whichever is greater. The statute does list two exceptions:
- Four times the compensatory damages or $4 million if the conduct was motivated by financial gain and the dangerous conduct and potential for injury were known to the person making policy decisions for the defendant.
- No cap if the defendant specifically intended to harm the claimant and the conduct actually harmed them.
How Florin|Roebig Builds a Winning Bedsore Claim
Our approach pairs rapid investigation with courtroom-ready preparation from day one. We don’t build cases hoping to settle. We prepare every case as if it will go to trial, which creates the leverage that drives better medical malpractice settlements.
Immediate Evidence Preservation
We send spoliation letters to all potential defendants, putting them on legal notice to preserve:
- Staffing data and assignment records
- Camera footage and surveillance video
- EMR audit logs and metadata
- Internal communications and emails
- Prior inspection reports and deficiency citations
This legal obligation to preserve evidence prevents “accidental” destruction of damaging materials.
Expert-Driven Case Review
We retain leading medical experts to evaluate every aspect of the case, including:
- Wound-care nurses: Assess whether prevention and treatment met professional nursing standards.
- Geriatricians: Evaluate overall care quality and whether the patient’s condition made the wound truly unavoidable.
- Hospitalists: Review hospital care and whether protocols were followed.
- Infectious disease specialists: Analyze whether infections were correctly identified and treated appropriately.
These experts don’t just provide opinions. They educate us so we can effectively cross-examine defense witnesses and challenge their claims.
Life-Care Planning for Severe Injuries
For catastrophic pressure injuries requiring ongoing care, we work with life-care planners and economists to project future costs related to:
- Long-term wound care and dressings
- Durable medical equipment
- Home health and nursing care
- Future surgeries or procedures
- Loss of earning capacity
This planning ensures we demand compensation that truly covers the lifetime impact of the injury.
Aggressive Discovery and Investigation
Once litigation begins, we dig deep into the facility’s operations to uncover:
- Staffing models and budget decisions demonstrating cost-cutting at the expense of patient safety.
- Prior deficiencies and violations showing patterns of poor care.
- Policies vs. practice evidence indicating written policies weren’t actually followed.
- Training records documenting whether staff received proper training.
- Prior lawsuits and settlements showing patterns of similar incidents.
This systemic evidence shows juries that the injury suffered by you or your loved one wasn’t an isolated incident but rather the predictable result of deliberate choices.
Trial Leverage Drives Settlements
We prepare every case for trial and have a proven track record in the courtroom. Defense lawyers and insurance companies know we’re willing and able to take cases to verdict, which creates settlement leverage. Facilities would rather negotiate reasonable compensation than risk a jury seeing the complete picture of their failures.
What You Can Do Now to Help Your Bedsore Case
While you should contact an attorney as quickly as possible, there are essential steps you can take right now to strengthen your potential claim. We outline the steps below.
Take Photographs Daily
Visual documentation is irrefutable evidence. Photograph the wound in good, natural light and include a ruler or coin for size reference in each photo. Take photos from multiple angles and never edit or enhance the images. Save all the original files with metadata intact, including date, time and location.
Track Symptoms and Observations
Create a detailed log noting:
- Fever, with specific temperatures and times
- Foul odor from the wound
- Drainage color and amount
- Pain levels on a scale of 1-10
- Changes in mental status or behavior
- Dates and times of staff interactions
- Type of care being provided/not provided
Request Medical Records Immediately
Ask the facility for copies of the complete care plan, wound-care notes and assessments, Braden Scale scores and risk assessments, and incident reports related to the pressure ulcer. Also, request all nursing notes, physician orders and staffing assignments. Keep copies of everything you receive. Don’t rely on the facility to preserve records—get your own copies now.
Write a Detailed Timeline
Document the chronology of events, including:
- Date of admission to the facility
- When you first noticed skin changes or wounds
- Dates of transfers between facilities or units
- When specialists were (or weren’t) consulted
- Conversations with staff about the wound
- Any discharge or transfer dates
Be Careful with Legal Documents
Do NOT sign:
- Arbitration agreements forcing you to give up your right to a jury trial
- Releases or waivers of liability
- Settlement agreements without attorney review
However, if you’ve already signed something, don’t assume it’s enforceable. Many arbitration agreements can be challenged. Bring any documents you’ve signed to your Florin|Roebig bedsores attorney consultation.
Limit Social Media Activity
Insurance companies and defense lawyers routinely monitor social media to find evidence they can use against you.
- Avoid posting about the case or your loved one’s condition.
- Don’t share photos that could be taken out of context.
- Adjust privacy settings to limit public access.
- Remember that “private” messages can be discovered in litigation.
Anything you post can potentially be used against you to minimize your claim.
Contact Florin|Roebig for a Free Evaluation
If you’re not sure what to request, how to document evidence or whether you have a valid claim, don’t wait. Time is critical in medical malpractice lawsuits. We can guide you through the necessary steps and take over the investigation immediately to ensure nothing is missed.
FAQs About Florida Bedsore Lawsuits
Are bedsores always a sign of neglect?
Bedsores aren’t always a sign of neglect, but most pressure ulcers are preventable when facilities follow basic prevention protocols. Some patients do face extreme risk despite appropriate measures. However, the “unavoidable” defense requires the facility to prove it actually took all appropriate steps.
Is a hospital bedsore considered medical malpractice?
A hospital bedsore is often considered medical malpractice. When a hospital’s medical staff, including nurses, physicians and other healthcare providers, fails to meet accepted standards for pressure ulcer prevention and treatment, the claim typically proceeds as medical malpractice. However, the specific legal pathway depends on the circumstances, and we’ll confirm the correct approach during your free evaluation.
Can I sue an assisted living facility for bedsores?
You may sue an assisted living facility for bedsores, depending on what the facility knew about the risk and what actions they took or failed to take. While assisted living facilities aren’t licensed as medical facilities, they have a duty to respond appropriately to known risks and to arrange appropriate medical care when needed. If they ignored clear warning signs, failed to provide adequate supervision or waited too long to transfer a resident to a higher level of care, they may be held liable.
Who pays for medical experts and case costs?
Florin|Roebig handles bedsore cases on a contingency fee basis. That means you don’t pay any attorney fees unless we win your case. While we handle your case, all costs are advanced by our firm, which are typically reimbursed from your recovery as allowed by Florida law. However, you’re not billed for our time or case costs if we don’t win your case and recover compensation for your claim, allowing you or your family to pursue justice without an upfront financial burden.
Can I still file a lawsuit if my loved one signed an arbitration agreement?
Don’t assume that your loved one signing an arbitration agreement bars your claim. Many nursing home arbitration agreements are unenforceable because they were signed under duress, weren’t explained properly or were signed by someone without legal authority. They also frequently contain unconscionable terms and violate Florida public policy. Bring the agreement to your consultation, and we’ll evaluate whether it can be challenged.
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Call Florin|Roebig Today for a Free Case Review
If you or a loved one developed bedsores in a Florida hospital, nursing home or assisted living facility, don’t wait. Evidence disappears, deadlines expire and facilities immediately begin building their defense. Our trial-ready legal team at Florin|Roebig will:
- Investigate your case quickly and thoroughly.
- Secure the medical records, staffing data and other evidence that matters.
- Identify all responsible parties and sources of compensation.
- Build a case designed to win at the negotiating table or in court.
- Handle all costs upfront on a contingency fee basis.
Our experienced medical malpractice and nursing home abuse attorneys are ready to fight for the justice and compensation your family deserves. If your case involves the death of a loved one from bedsore complications, we understand the profound loss you’re facing. We want to protect your family’s rights and hold negligent facilities accountable. Call us for a free, confidential consultation today.