When nursing homes fail to protect Chalmette’s elderly residents from abuse, neglect, or exploitation, families deserve aggressive legal representation to hold negligent facilities accountable. Smiley Injury Law represents victims and their families throughout Chalmette against nursing homes that breach their duty of care, pursuing maximum compensation for physical injuries, emotional trauma, wrongful death, and the violation of residents’ fundamental rights under state and federal law.
Nursing home abuse occurs when caregivers harm or neglect residents in long-term care facilities. This includes both intentional harm and failures to provide basic care that residents require for their health, safety, and dignity.
Louisiana law protects nursing home residents through the Louisiana Nursing Home Residents’ Bill of Rights (LA Rev Stat § 40:2010.8), which explicitly guarantees residents the right to be free from verbal, sexual, physical, and mental abuse, corporal punishment, and involuntary seclusion.
When nursing homes violate these rights, victims and their families can pursue legal action to recover damages for injuries, losses, and suffering caused by abuse or neglect.
Physical abuse involves any intentional use of force that results in bodily injury, pain, or impairment. This includes hitting, slapping, pushing, kicking, pinching, burning, and improper use of physical restraints.
Warning signs of physical abuse include unexplained bruises, cuts, burns, fractures, sprains, or injuries in various stages of healing. Restraint marks on wrists or ankles, broken eyeglasses, and signs of being physically restrained also indicate potential abuse.
Emotional abuse causes mental anguish through verbal or nonverbal actions. This includes yelling, threatening, humiliating, intimidating, isolating residents from family, ignoring residents, or treating them like children.
Signs of emotional abuse include sudden changes in behavior, withdrawal from activities previously enjoyed, depression, anxiety, fear of certain staff members, unusual agitation, and reluctance to speak openly when caregivers are present.
Sexual abuse encompasses any non-consensual sexual contact with a nursing home resident. This includes unwanted touching, sexual assault, forced nudity, and photographing residents inappropriately.
Warning signs include unexplained sexually transmitted infections, bruising around breasts or genital areas, torn or bloody undergarments, and sudden changes in behavior or fear of being alone with certain staff members.
Neglect occurs when nursing homes fail to provide residents with necessary care, including adequate food, water, medical attention, hygiene assistance, and supervision. Neglect may be intentional or result from understaffing and inadequate training.
The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) defines neglect as failure to meet an older adult’s basic needs including food, water, shelter, clothing, hygiene, and essential medical care.
Financial exploitation involves the illegal or improper use of a resident’s funds, property, or assets. This includes theft of money or belongings, forging signatures, unauthorized use of credit cards, coercing changes to wills or powers of attorney, and charging for services not provided.
Abandonment occurs when a nursing home or caregiver deserts a resident without arranging for necessary continued care. This includes discharging residents without proper notice or transferring them to inappropriate facilities.
Families should watch for these physical indicators of potential abuse or neglect:
Changes in behavior may indicate abuse even when physical signs are absent:
The facility’s condition can reveal systemic neglect:
Louisiana law (LA Rev Stat § 40:2010.8) establishes comprehensive rights for nursing home residents. These rights must be prominently displayed in accessible areas of nursing homes at proper height and in print of appropriate size for elderly individuals with impaired vision.
Key rights include:
Right to Dignity and Respect: Residents have the right to be treated with consideration, respect, and full recognition of their dignity and individuality.
Right to Be Free from Abuse: Residents have the right to be free from verbal, sexual, physical, or mental abuse, corporal punishment, and involuntary seclusion.
Right to Privacy: Residents have the right to personal privacy, confidentiality of personal and clinical records, and private communications with family and others.
Right to Quality Care: Residents have the right to receive adequate and appropriate health care and protective supervision consistent with their needs.
Right to Information: Residents have the right to be fully informed of their health status, treatment options, and to participate in planning their care.
Right to Freedom of Choice: Residents have the right to choose their own physician, participate in community activities, and make decisions about their daily life.
Right to Voice Grievances: Residents have the right to voice grievances without fear of retaliation and to have those grievances addressed promptly.
Federal regulations (42 CFR § 483.12) provide additional protections, requiring nursing homes receiving Medicare or Medicaid funding to ensure residents are free from abuse, neglect, misappropriation of property, and exploitation.
Louisiana’s Nursing Home Virtual Visitation Act, effective January 1, 2019, gives residents or their legal representatives the right to install monitoring devices (“granny cams”) in their rooms.
This law allows families to monitor their loved one’s care remotely and can provide crucial evidence of abuse or neglect that occurs when family members are not physically present.
Inadequate staffing is the leading cause of nursing home neglect. When facilities don’t employ enough qualified caregivers, residents don’t receive timely assistance with basic needs, medical care, or supervision.
Chalmette nursing homes must meet specific staffing requirements under state administrative code (Title 48, Part I), but many facilities operate with minimum staffing levels that fail to meet residents’ actual needs.
Staff members who lack proper training may not understand how to safely transfer residents, recognize signs of medical emergencies, administer medications correctly, or respond appropriately to residents with dementia or behavioral issues.
Caregiving is demanding work. When staff members are overworked, underpaid, and inadequately supported, they may become frustrated and take out their stress on vulnerable residents.
Louisiana law requires criminal history and security checks for nursing facility staff members. Facilities that fail to conduct thorough background checks may hire individuals with histories of violence, theft, or abuse.
Some nursing home operators prioritize profits over resident care, cutting corners on staffing, training, supplies, and facility maintenance to maximize financial returns.
The Louisiana Department of Health (LDH) Health Standards Section licenses and regulates nursing homes in Chalmette. You can file complaints by:
Louisiana Revised Statute § 15:1504(A) requires certain individuals to report suspected abuse, neglect, or exploitation of adults. Healthcare workers, including mental health and social services practitioners, have a legal obligation to report concerns.
Those who make good faith reports and cooperate in investigations are protected from legal liability.
Louisiana Adult Protective Services investigates reports of abuse, neglect, and exploitation of vulnerable adults. Contact them at (800) 898-4910.
If you believe a nursing home resident is in immediate danger, call 911. Criminal abuse and neglect should also be reported to local law enforcement.
To s\ucceed in a Chalmette nursing home abuse lawsuit, you must prove:
Negligence Claims: When nursing homes fail to exercise reasonable care in protecting residents from harm.
Premises Liability Claims: When dangerous conditions on nursing home property cause resident injuries.
Medical Malpractice Claims: When healthcare providers within the nursing home commit medical errors.
Wrongful Death Claims: When nursing home abuse or neglect causes a resident’s death.
Violation of Residents’ Rights: When nursing homes violate rights guaranteed under Louisiana’s Nursing Home Residents’ Bill of Rights.
Medical Expenses: Costs for treating injuries caused by abuse or neglect, including hospitalization, surgery, medications, therapy, and ongoing medical care.
Relocation Costs: Expenses for moving the resident to a safer facility.
Funeral and Burial Expenses: In wrongful death cases, families can recover costs associated with the resident’s death.
Pain and Suffering: Compensation for physical pain and discomfort caused by abuse or neglect.
Emotional Distress: Damages for psychological trauma, anxiety, depression, and fear experienced by abuse victims.
Loss of Dignity: Compensation for the humiliation and degradation suffered by residents.
Loss of Enjoyment of Life: Damages for the diminished quality of life caused by abuse or neglect.
When nursing home abuse or neglect causes death, Louisiana Civil Code Article 2315.2 allows surviving family members to recover:
For nursing home abuse injuries occurring on or after July 1, 2024, Chalmette’s statute of limitations is two years from the date of injury. For injuries before that date, the deadline is one year.
Under Louisiana Civil Code Article 2315.2, wrongful death claims must be filed within one year from the death or two years from the day injury or damage is sustained, whichever is longer.
Evidence in nursing home abuse cases can disappear quickly. Facilities may alter records, surveillance footage may be deleted, and witnesses’ memories fade. Acting promptly ensures critical evidence is preserved.
Smiley Injury Law conducts thorough investigations including:
We work with experts who can testify about:
We negotiate aggressively with nursing home insurance companies while preparing your case for trial if necessary. Chalmette juries take nursing home abuse seriously and have awarded substantial verdicts to victims and their families.
RECENTLY ASKED TOPICS
Report Louisiana nursing home abandonment to the Louisiana Department of Health Health Standards Section at (888) 810-1819, Adult Protective Services at (800) 898-4910, and local law enforcement if the resident is in immediate danger. You can also file complaints online through the Louisiana Department of Health website.
Yes, Louisiana nursing homes are legally required to maintain comprehensive emergency evacuation plans and cannot abandon residents during hurricanes, floods, or other disasters.
Facilities that fail to properly evacuate residents, leave them behind, or fail to provide adequate care during emergencies can be held liable for abandonment, and in some cases, criminal charges may apply.
Key evidence in Louisiana nursing home abandonment cases includes medical records showing untreated conditions, staffing logs revealing inadequate coverage, discharge documentation, facility inspection reports, surveillance footage, witness statements from staff and other residents’ families, and expert testimony establishing standard of care violations.
Yes, Louisiana law allows family members to file wrongful death lawsuits when nursing home abandonment causes death.
Under Louisiana Civil Code Article 2315.2, surviving spouses, children, parents, siblings, or grandparents can recover compensation for grief, loss of love and companionship, loss of services, and funeral expenses. These claims must be filed within one year of death or two years from the injury.
Louisiana nursing home abandonment victims can recover economic damages including medical bills and relocation costs; non-economic damages for pain, suffering, emotional distress, and loss of dignity; and in death cases, surviving family members can recover for grief, loss of companionship, and funeral expenses. Egregious abandonment may also support punitive damage claims.
For abandonment injuries occurring on or after July 1, 2024, you have two years from the date of injury to file a Louisiana nursing home abandonment lawsuit.
For injuries before that date, the deadline is only one year. Wrongful death claims allow one year from death or two years from the injury, whichever is longer. Missing these deadlines typically eliminates your right to compensation.
Multiple parties may be liable for Louisiana nursing home abandonment: the nursing home facility, corporate ownership groups and management companies, individual administrators who failed to maintain adequate staffing, staff members who abandoned residents, and medical directors who failed to ensure proper care protocols. Holding all responsible parties accountable maximizes compensation and drives systemic change.
If a Louisiana nursing home attempts improper discharge, immediately request the discharge notice in writing, file an appeal with the facility, report the attempted discharge to the Louisiana Department of Health at (888) 810-1819, and contact a nursing home abuse attorney. You have the right to challenge improper discharges and keep your loved one in the facility during the appeal.
Louisiana nursing homes can only discharge residents for specific legal reasons: the resident’s welfare requires transfer, the resident’s health has improved, the facility cannot meet the resident’s needs, the resident has failed to pay, or the facility is closing. Even then, facilities must provide advance written notice and arrange appropriate alternative care.
Nursing home abandonment is the complete desertion of a resident without arranging continued care, while neglect is the ongoing failure to provide adequate care while the resident remains in the facility’s custody.
Both are actionable under Louisiana law, but abandonment typically involves more egregious conduct such as improper discharge, leaving residents during emergencies, or staff walking off shifts entirely.
Smiley Injury Law handles financial exploitation cases on contingency, meaning you pay no attorney fees unless we recover compensation for you. Our fee comes from your settlement or verdict, not from your pocket upfront.
Louisiana law makes everyone a mandatory reporter of elder abuse, including financial exploitation. This includes healthcare workers, nursing home staff, bank employees, family members, and any citizen who suspects exploitation.
Yes, financial exploitation claims can proceed even when the victim has dementia or cognitive impairment. Cases rely on forensic financial evidence, facility records, witness testimony, and expert analysis rather than solely on victim testimony.
Under Louisiana Revised Statute 14:67.21, financial exploitation of an elderly person can result in fines up to $10,000, imprisonment up to 10 years with hard labor depending on stolen amounts, mandatory restitution, and prohibition from accessing victim’s assets or serving as power of attorney.
Louisiana’s statute of limitations for nursing home financial exploitation personal injury claims is two years from the date of injury for incidents occurring on or after July 1, 2024, or one year for earlier incidents.
You can recover all stolen funds and property values, interest from the date of theft, forensic accounting costs, emotional distress damages, and potentially punitive damages when facilities demonstrated reckless disregard for resident safety.
Yes, Louisiana law allows civil lawsuits against nursing homes, staff members, management companies, and corporate owners who commit or enable financial exploitation through negligent hiring, inadequate supervision, or failure to implement protective protocols.
Immediately secure your loved one’s accounts by changing passwords and contacting financial institutions, document all evidence, report to Louisiana Elderly Protective Services at 1-844-945-2377, and contact a nursing home financial exploitation attorney.
Watch for unexplained bank withdrawals, missing valuables, unpaid bills despite adequate funds, new accounts you didn’t authorize, changes to legal documents, and behavioral signs like confusion or anxiety about finances.
Financial exploitation means the illegal or improper use of an elderly resident’s funds, assets, or property, including misuse of power of attorney, for someone else’s profit or advantage.
If neglect caused or contributed to your loved one’s death, Louisiana law allows surviving family members to file a wrongful death lawsuit.
Under Louisiana Civil Code Article 2315.2, surviving spouses, children, parents, siblings, or grandparents can recover compensation for grief, loss of companionship, loss of services, and funeral expenses.
Nursing homes often claim pre-existing conditions caused residents’ problems.
However, facilities accept residents knowing their medical needs and assume the duty to provide appropriate care. A diabetic resident who develops bedsores still deserves proper repositioning. Medical experts can distinguish between unavoidable decline and preventable neglect.
Proving neglect requires documenting the resident’s condition, obtaining medical records showing inadequate care, reviewing staffing schedules revealing understaffing, gathering incident reports and complaints, and retaining medical experts to establish standard of care violations. Your attorney subpoenas internal records the facility won’t voluntarily provide.
Many neglect victims have dementia or cognitive impairments that prevent them from reporting problems.
Families must watch for physical signs like weight loss, bedsores, dehydration, and poor hygiene. Louisiana law allows family members and legal representatives to file complaints and lawsuits on behalf of incapacitated residents.
Louisiana neglect victims can recover economic damages for medical expenses, hospitalization, rehabilitation, and relocation; non-economic damages for pain and suffering, emotional distress, loss of dignity, and diminished quality of life; and punitive damages when facilities showed willful disregard for residents’ safety and wellbeing.
For neglect injuries occurring on or after July 1, 2024, Louisiana’s statute of limitations is two years from the date of injury.
For injuries before that date, you have only one year. Wrongful death claims must be filed within one year of death or two years from the injury. The discovery rule may extend deadlines in limited circumstances.
Yes, Louisiana law allows victims and families to sue nursing homes for neglect.
You must prove the facility owed a duty of care, breached that duty through negligent acts or omissions, and caused harm as a result. Under vicarious liability, nursing homes are responsible for their employees’ negligence. Multiple parties may share liability.
While some medical conditions increase bedsore risk, most pressure ulcers are preventable with proper care.
When nursing homes follow standard protocols—repositioning residents every two hours, maintaining good nutrition and hydration, keeping skin clean and dry, and using pressure-relieving surfaces—bedsores should not develop or progress beyond early stages.
Nursing home neglect is the failure to provide necessary care—a passive act of omission.
Abuse involves intentional harmful conduct like hitting, sexual assault, or verbal attacks—active wrongdoing. Both violate Louisiana law and residents’ rights. Neglect often results from understaffing while abuse involves deliberate misconduct by specific individuals.
Protect your loved one by visiting frequently at unpredictable times, watching for warning signs during visits, speaking privately with your loved one away from staff, checking their body for unexplained injuries, installing a monitoring camera under Louisiana’s Virtual Visitation Act, reviewing the facility’s inspection history, and immediately reporting any concerns to authorities.
If sexual abuse caused or contributed to your loved one’s death, Louisiana law allows surviving family members to file a wrongful death lawsuit.
Under Louisiana Civil Code Article 2315.2, surviving spouses, children, parents, siblings, or grandparents can recover compensation for grief and anguish, loss of love and companionship, loss of services, and funeral expenses.
Most nursing home sexual abuse cases settle before trial, meaning victims typically don’t testify in court.
If testimony becomes necessary, experienced attorneys prepare victims carefully and work to minimize re-traumatization. For victims with dementia who cannot testify, cases are built on medical evidence, expert testimony, facility records, and other documentation.
Nursing homes can be held liable for resident-on-resident sexual abuse if they failed to properly assess residents’ behavioral risks, provide adequate supervision, separate potentially dangerous residents, or respond appropriately to warning signs.
Facilities must protect all residents from foreseeable harm, including from other residents with dementia or behavioral disorders.
Louisiana sexual abuse victims can recover economic damages including medical treatment, psychological counseling, and relocation costs; non-economic damages for pain and suffering, emotional trauma, PTSD, loss of dignity, and diminished quality of life; and punitive damages in egregious cases. The severe psychological impact of sexual abuse often justifies substantial damage awards.
For sexual abuse injuries occurring on or after July 1, 2024, Louisiana’s statute of limitations is two years from the date of injury.
For injuries before that date, you have only one year. Criminal charges have different deadlines—forcible rape has no time limit. The discovery rule may extend deadlines for victims who couldn’t reasonably discover abuse due to cognitive impairment.
Yes, Louisiana law allows victims and families to sue nursing homes for sexual abuse.
You can file claims against the facility for negligent hiring, inadequate supervision, and failure to protect residents; individual abusers for assault and battery; management companies; and administrators who ignored warning signs. Multiple parties can share liability for damages.
Warning signs of nursing home sexual abuse include bruising or injuries around genitals or breasts, torn or bloody undergarments, unexplained sexually transmitted infections, difficulty walking or sitting, sudden behavioral changes like withdrawal or fearfulness, sleep disturbances, fear of specific caregivers, and inappropriate sexual comments or behaviors uncharacteristic of the resident.
Sexual abuse in Louisiana nursing homes includes any non-consensual sexual contact, including rape, sexual assault, unwanted touching of intimate areas, forced nudity, inappropriate photography, sexual harassment, and coerced witnessing of sexual acts.
Louisiana Revised Statute § 15:1503 specifically defines sexual abuse as forcing, threatening, or coercing an adult into sexual activity or contact.
Nursing home emotional abuse cases require specialized knowledge of Louisiana elder law, experience gathering psychological evidence, and resources to fight well-funded nursing home defense teams.
Experienced attorneys know how to prove invisible injuries, work with expert witnesses, and navigate complex liability issues to maximize compensation for victims.
Yes, severe emotional abuse can contribute to a resident’s death by causing depression leading to failure to thrive, refusing food and medication, or accelerating cognitive and physical decline.
If emotional abuse is a contributing factor in a resident’s death, families can pursue wrongful death claims under Louisiana Civil Code Article 2315.2.
Multiple parties may be liable including the nursing home facility, management companies, corporate owners, individual abusive staff members, and administrators who failed to prevent abuse.
Facilities are often vicariously liable for their employees’ conduct. Holding all responsible parties accountable maximizes compensation and forces systemic changes to protect residents.
First, ensure your loved one’s immediate safety. Document all observations including behavioral changes, statements made, and specific concerns.
Report to the Louisiana Department of Health at (888) 810-1819 and Adult Protective Services at (800) 898-4910. Consider installing a room camera under Louisiana’s Virtual Visitation Act. Contact a nursing home abuse attorney immediately.
For emotional abuse occurring on or after July 1, 2024, Louisiana’s statute of limitations is two years from the date of injury.
For abuse before that date, the deadline is only one year. Missing these deadlines typically eliminates your right to compensation regardless of how severe the abuse or how clear the facility’s negligence.
Yes, Louisiana’s Nursing Home Virtual Visitation Act, effective January 1, 2019, gives residents or their legal representatives the right to install monitoring devices in nursing home rooms.
Nursing homes must provide forms explaining this right upon admission. Room cameras can capture verbal abuse, threats, and intimidation that would otherwise go unwitnessed.
Louisiana emotional abuse victims can recover compensation for mental anguish, emotional distress, anxiety, depression, loss of dignity, fear, loss of enjoyment of life, psychological treatment costs, therapy expenses, and medications. In cases of particularly egregious conduct, punitive damages may be available to punish the wrongdoer.
Yes, residents with dementia have the same legal protections against emotional abuse as any other nursing home resident.
In fact, dementia patients are particularly vulnerable to psychological mistreatment and deserve heightened protection. Family members or legal representatives can pursue claims on behalf of cognitively impaired residents.
Emotional abuse is proven through documented behavioral changes, psychological evaluations, witness testimony, room monitoring footage, facility records, and expert testimony.
Medical records showing new diagnoses of depression, anxiety, or PTSD support claims. Testimony from family members about personality changes before and after admission provides compelling evidence of abuse.
Emotional abuse in Louisiana nursing homes includes any verbal or nonverbal conduct causing psychological harm to residents.
This encompasses yelling, threatening, humiliating, intimidating, isolating, ignoring, ridiculing, blaming, and infantilizing elderly residents. Louisiana Revised Statute § 40:2010.8 explicitly protects residents from mental and verbal abuse by caregivers.
Louisiana has a $500,000 cap on damages in medical malpractice cases, but this cap may not apply to physical abuse claims.
When abuse doesn’t constitute medical malpractice—such as assault, battery, or intentional harm—damage caps typically don’t apply. The distinction between negligent medical care and intentional abuse determines whether caps affect your recovery.
If physical abuse caused your loved one’s death, Louisiana law allows surviving family members to file a wrongful death lawsuit.
Under Louisiana Civil Code Article 2315.2, surviving spouses, children, parents, siblings, or grandparents can recover compensation for grief and anguish, loss of love and companionship, loss of services, and funeral expenses.
Yes, Louisiana’s Nursing Home Virtual Visitation Act, effective January 1, 2019, gives residents or their legal representatives the right to install monitoring devices in nursing home rooms.
Nursing homes must provide forms explaining this right upon admission. Cameras provide crucial evidence of abuse and may deter staff from engaging in abusive conduct.
Nursing homes frequently claim injuries resulted from falls, pre-existing conditions, or natural decline rather than abuse.
Experienced attorneys work with medical experts who distinguish between accidental injuries and those caused by intentional harm. Patterned bruising, defensive wounds, and injury locations inconsistent with reported incidents often expose false explanations.
Louisiana physical abuse victims can recover economic damages including medical bills, hospitalization costs, rehabilitation, and ongoing care; non-economic damages for pain and suffering, emotional distress, loss of dignity, and diminished quality of life; and punitive damages in egregious cases. Settlement values depend on injury severity and evidence strength.
For physical abuse injuries occurring on or after July 1, 2024, Louisiana’s statute of limitations is two years from the date of injury.
For injuries before that date, you have only one year to file. Wrongful death claims must be filed within one year of death or two years from the injury date, whichever deadline is longer.
Yes, Louisiana law allows victims and their families to sue nursing homes for physical abuse.
You can file claims against the facility itself, management companies, corporate owners, individual staff members who committed abuse, and administrators who failed to properly hire, train, or supervise employees. Multiple parties may share liability.
Proving nursing home physical abuse requires documenting injuries through photographs and medical records, obtaining witness statements from other residents or staff, reviewing surveillance footage if available, analyzing staffing records and incident reports, and consulting medical experts who can distinguish abuse injuries from accidental harm or natural decline.
Physical abuse in Louisiana nursing homes includes any intentional use of force causing bodily harm, pain, or injury.
This encompasses hitting, slapping, pushing, kicking, pinching, burning, improper restraint use, rough handling during transfers, force-feeding, and any violent contact. Chemical restraints administered without medical necessity also constitute physical abuse.
Nursing homes often blame residents’ injuries on pre-existing conditions, age-related frailty, or unavoidable decline—but this defense frequently fails.
Skilled attorneys work with medical experts who can distinguish between natural disease progression and injuries caused by neglect. Bedsores, malnutrition, dehydration, untreated infections, and preventable falls result from inadequate care, not simply aging. Thorough investigation and expert testimony can establish that proper care would have prevented your loved one’s injuries.
Yes, Louisiana’s Nursing Home Virtual Visitation Act, effective January 1, 2019, gives residents or their legal representatives the right to install monitoring devices in their rooms.
The nursing home must provide forms explaining this right upon admission. Cameras can provide crucial evidence of abuse that occurs when family members aren’t present and may deter staff from engaging in abusive conduct.
Louisiana has a $500,000 cap on damages in medical malpractice cases, but this cap may not apply to all nursing home abuse claims.
When abuse or neglect doesn’t constitute medical malpractice—such as physical assault, failure to provide basic care, or financial exploitation—damage caps typically don’t apply. Recent legislation has attempted to extend malpractice protections to nursing home management companies, making the legal landscape evolving and complex.
Multiple parties may be liable for nursing home abuse in Louisiana, including the nursing home facility itself, management companies that operate the facility, individual staff members who committed abuse, administrators who failed to properly supervise staff, and corporate owners who prioritized profits over resident care. Holding all responsible parties accountable often maximizes compensation and forces systemic changes to protect other residents.
Louisiana nursing home abuse victims can recover economic damages including medical expenses, relocation costs, and funeral expenses in death cases; non-economic damages for pain and suffering, emotional distress, loss of dignity, and diminished quality of life; and in egregious cases, punitive damages to punish particularly reckless conduct. Wrongful death claims allow surviving family members to recover for grief, loss of companionship, and the services their loved one would have provided.
Yes, Louisiana law allows family members to file wrongful death lawsuits when nursing home abuse or neglect causes a resident’s death.
Under Louisiana Civil Code Article 2315.2, surviving spouses, children, parents, siblings, or grandparents can recover compensation for their grief and anguish, loss of the deceased’s love and companionship, loss of services, and funeral expenses. These claims must be filed within one year of death or two years from the injury date, whichever is longer.
Louisiana’s statute of limitations for nursing home abuse personal injury claims is two years from the date of injury for incidents occurring on or after July 1, 2024.
For injuries before that date, the deadline is only one year. For wrongful death claims, you have one year from the death or two years from the injury date, whichever is longer. Missing these deadlines typically eliminates your right to compensation regardless of how severe the abuse was or how clear the facility’s negligence.
First, ensure your loved one’s immediate safety—call 911 if they’re in danger.
Document everything by photographing injuries, noting dates and times, and preserving any evidence. Report the abuse to the nursing home administrator and the Louisiana Department of Health at (888) 810-1819. Consider requesting a facility transfer to protect your loved one from further harm. Contact a Louisiana nursing home abuse attorney immediately to preserve evidence and protect your family’s legal rights.
Watch for physical signs including unexplained injuries, bedsores, rapid weight loss, dehydration, poor hygiene, and untreated medical conditions.
Behavioral changes are equally important: sudden withdrawal, depression, fear of certain staff members, unusual agitation, or reluctance to speak openly during visits. Environmental red flags include unsanitary conditions, strong odors, insufficient staffing, and broken safety equipment. Trust your instincts—if something seems wrong, investigate further.
Louisiana law defines nursing home abuse as any knowing, intentional, or negligent act by a caregiver that causes harm or serious risk of harm to a resident.
This includes physical abuse such as hitting, pushing, or improper restraint use; emotional abuse including threats, humiliation, or isolation; sexual abuse of any kind; neglect involving failure to provide adequate food, water, medical care, or hygiene; and financial exploitation through theft or misuse of a resident’s funds or property.
Smiley Injury Law handles nursing home abuse cases on contingency, meaning you pay no attorney fees unless we recover compensation for you—our fee comes from your settlement or verdict, not from your pocket upfront.
We also advance all case expenses including expert witness fees, medical examinations, investigation costs, court filing fees, and deposition expenses. This arrangement allows everyone access to experienced legal representation regardless of financial circumstances, ensuring justice isn’t limited to those who can afford hourly attorney rates.
Facilities often claim residents’ injuries resulted from their own actions, pre-existing conditions, or unavoidable complications of aging.
We counter these defenses with medical expert testimony showing injuries were preventable with proper care, facility records revealing inadequate staffing or supervision, and evidence the facility breached care standards. Even when residents have medical conditions requiring intensive care, facilities must provide appropriate staffing and protocols—they cannot accept residents then blame the residents when care proves inadequate.
Yes, and you should prioritize your loved one’s safety above all else—if you believe they’re in danger, move them immediately to a safer facility. Moving won’t harm your legal case and often strengthens it by showing the prior facility’s inadequacy made relocation necessary.
Document reasons for the move and additional costs incurred. We can include relocation expenses in your damage claims. Your loved one’s continued safety always takes precedence over litigation strategy.
You can recover medical expenses for treating abuse-related injuries, costs of relocating to safer facilities, in-home care expenses, pain and suffering, emotional distress, loss of dignity, and potentially punitive damages when facilities demonstrated reckless disregard for resident safety.
Economic damages include all past and future costs caused by abuse or neglect. Non-economic damages compensate for intangible harms. In wrongful death cases, families recover funeral expenses, loss of companionship, and other death-related damages.
Nursing home abuse cases typically resolve in 18-36 months depending on injury severity, facility cooperation during discovery, and whether trial becomes necessary.
Cases involving clear liability and willing defendants may settle within a year. Complex cases with multiple defendants, extensive injuries, or corporate defendants fighting liability often take longer. We balance efficiency with thoroughness, ensuring your case is fully developed to maximize compensation rather than rushing to inadequate settlements.
You should report suspected abuse to Adult Protective Services (APS), law enforcement, and the Louisiana Department of Health for investigation, but reporting isn’t required before filing civil lawsuits.
Reporting creates official investigation records that strengthen your legal case. However, don’t delay consulting an attorney while waiting for agency investigations—these investigations take months, and evidence disappears quickly. We can pursue legal action while government agencies conduct parallel investigations.
You can still pursue nursing home abuse claims even when your loved one has dementia or has passed away—medical evidence, facility records, witness testimony, and expert opinions establish what happened.
Medical examiners testify about injuries and their causes. Staff, visitors, and other residents can describe what they witnessed. Facility records often contradict staff explanations for injuries. Louisiana law allows family members to pursue claims on behalf of incapacitated loved ones through guardianship or as wrongful death survivors.
Possibly—Louisiana courts sometimes refuse to enforce nursing home arbitration clauses, particularly when signed under duress, lack proper explanation, or waive rights to jury trials for wrongful death claims brought by family members who didn’t sign the agreements.
Federal law prohibits mandatory arbitration for Medicare/Medicaid-participating facilities as of certain dates. Our attorneys challenge arbitration clauses and frequently succeed in having cases heard by Louisiana juries rather than private arbitrators.
Louisiana’s 2-year prescription period requires filing lawsuits within one year from discovering the abuse or neglect, or from when injuries became apparent.
This deadline is strictly enforced, and missing it typically eliminates your right to compensation. Some circumstances may extend this deadline slightly, but immediate legal consultation protects your rights. For wrongful death cases, the 1-year period generally runs from the date of death. Learn more about Louisiana prescription periods from the Louisiana State Legislature.
Warning signs include unexplained injuries (bruises, fractures, burns), bedsores, sudden weight loss or dehydration, poor hygiene, behavioral changes (withdrawal, depression, fear of staff), missing personal belongings, and reluctance to discuss care when staff are present.
Trust your instincts—if something seems wrong, investigate immediately. Document concerns with photographs, request medical examinations, and review facility inspection reports through Louisiana Department of Health.

Seth Smiley – New Orleans Nursing Home Abuse Attorney
Nursing homes should be equipped with well-trained staff to deal with any kind of situation that can happen within their compound. Administrative negligence can cause injury and harm to the residents within the healthcare facilities and potentially expose them to an unworthy situation.
A reputed Chalmette nursing home abuse lawyer from Smiley Injury Lawyers can offer a comprehensive approach to help you in a dire situation.
If you have faced a similar situation with any senile member of your family or among your friends, look no further, as Smiley Injury Lawyers are here to help you. Give us a call at (504) 822-2222, we would be more than happy to help you.
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