Verdict in Illinois History:
$127,000,000

Nursing Home Abuse and Neglect is a unique and highly specialized area within the broader field of medical malpractice. As our nation’s population grows older, more families rely on nursing homes to provide daily care, medical support, and a safe living environment. When a facility fails to meet basic standards and a resident is harmed, families deserve answers, accountability, and justice.
At Goldberg & Goldberg, LLC, we represent individuals and families facing the painful reality of nursing home abuse and nursing home neglect in Chicago and throughout Illinois. We understand how difficult it is to suspect mistreatment, and we know how urgently families need skilled legal guidance when warning signs appear.
Nursing home cases are not like ordinary injury claims. Nursing homes are regulated under federal oversight legislation commonly known as OBRA, also called the Nursing Home Reform Act. First signed into law in 1987, OBRA required sweeping changes in federal standards to improve the quality of care in nursing homes, including protections for resident rights and minimum care requirements.
Federal law also emphasizes quality of life and requires nursing facilities to care for residents in a manner that promotes or enhances each resident’s well being. U.S. Code
In plain terms, nursing homes must provide care that protects residents from harm, respects dignity, and addresses medical needs. When they do not, and a resident suffers abuse or neglect, the facility can be held responsible.
One powerful legal tool in nursing home abuse and neglect litigation is the possibility of recovering attorney fees in appropriate cases. Fee recovery provisions can help families pursue justice without feeling like the cost of legal action is out of reach, and it can motivate facilities to resolve valid claims fairly either before trial or at trial.
Every case is different, and fee rules depend on the specific claims and applicable law, but this legal leverage can be significant when a facility has clearly failed to protect a resident.
Many residents cannot easily report what is happening to them. That is why families should take complaints seriously and watch for patterns. Some of the most common problems that may indicate nursing home negligence include the following.
Bedsores can be a red flag for poor repositioning, lack of monitoring, dehydration, and inadequate staffing. Serious pressure injuries can lead to infection, hospitalization, and permanent harm.
Falls are often linked to poor supervision, unsafe rooms, missing safety equipment, medication mismanagement, or failure to assist with mobility.
Frequent infections can point to poor hygiene, delayed treatment, improper wound care, or failure to follow basic medical protocols.
Sudden weight loss, dehydration, weakness, and confusion may signal that meals are not being provided properly or that assistance with eating is not being given when needed.
Unexplained bruises, fearfulness, torn clothing, withdrawal, sudden anxiety, or signs of trauma should never be ignored. Any suspicion of abuse deserves immediate attention.
Nursing homes and their insurance companies often respond aggressively when a claim is made. They may argue that injuries were unavoidable, blame a resident’s age or medical condition, or claim the family is misunderstanding the situation. This is why early legal help matters.
A strong case often depends on acting quickly to preserve evidence such as facility records, care plans, staffing logs, incident reports, wound documentation, medication administration records, and internal communications. Facilities are also subject to inspections and enforcement mechanisms tied to federal participation requirements, and enforcement information can play an important role in showing patterns of noncompliance. CMS
Our approach is detailed and evidence driven. We work to identify what happened, why it happened, and who is responsible. Depending on the case, we may:
Our goal is accountability and fair compensation, and just as importantly, helping families feel informed and supported through a stressful process.
Neglect is a failure to provide proper care, such as hygiene, nutrition, supervision, or medical attention. Abuse involves intentional harm, which can be physical, emotional, sexual, or financial.
Make sure your loved one is safe, seek medical evaluation if needed, document what you see, and contact a lawyer who handles nursing home abuse and neglect cases.
Not always, but serious bedsores are often preventable with proper care. A legal review of records and care plans can reveal whether standards were violated.
Yes, if an infection results from poor hygiene, improper wound care, delayed treatment, or failure to follow reasonable medical protocols.
Yes. OBRA and related federal requirements set minimum standards for facilities receiving Medicare or Medicaid funds, including resident rights and quality of care obligations. Nursing Home Law Center LLC+1
Your initial consultation is free. You can discuss the situation, learn your options, and decide your next step without obligation.
If you or a loved one is the victim of Nursing Home Abuse and Neglect, you do not have to handle this alone. You deserve clear answers, caring guidance, and a legal team that will take your concerns seriously.
Please contact Goldberg & Goldberg, LLC at 312 368 0255 to discuss your situation. Your initial consultation is absolutely free.