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Nursing Home Negligence

  • Workers’ Compensation Lawsuit Grows to More Than 100,000 Business Owners
    What had previously been a small lawsuit filed by seven Ohio companies seeking restitution from the Ohio Bureau of Workers’ Compensation was expanded when Judge Richard McMonagle reclassified the lawsuit as a class-action suit. This ruling expands the lawsuit — San Allen Inc. dba Corky and Lenny’s v. BWC — to include an estimated 100,000 small businesses.
  • Ohio Lawmaker Wants to Deny Workers' Compensation to Illegal Immigrants
    Courts in recent years have upheld the workers' compensation rights of injured immigrant employees, regardless of legal status. Only one state - Wyoming - excludes illegal immigrants from the workers' compensation system. Ohio may become the second.
  • Fighting Mandatory Ohio Nursing Home Arbitration Clauses
    It does not get much more stressful than the experience of admitting a cherished family member to a nursing home. Unfortunately, this experience is all too common in Ohio and across the U.S., with nearly 1.5 million patients currently in long-term care facilities. A family member already grieving for the declining health and independence of his or her loved one faces the challenge of finding the rare opening in a decent care center, and of getting through all the red tape of the admissions process.
  • Nursing Homes, in Bid to Cut Costs, Prod Patients to Forgo Lawsuits
    There is a growing trend for the nursing home industry to write binding arbitration clauses into their standard contracts in an effort to reduce legal costs. Nursing homes have been adopting arbitration strategies in large numbers since a wave of large jury awards against them in the late 1990's. Arbitration can reduce the number of big punitive judgements for neglect and wrongful death as each award is determined by an independent arbitrator and not a jury.
  • At Many Homes, More Profit and Less Nursing.  The New York Times September 23, 2007
    Investors of nursing homes earn millions after dramatically cutting costs of 49 homes.  Half of the registered nursing staff was cut as well as many nursing supplies, activities for the residents, and many other services. One daughter of a resident says “They’ve created a hellhole.”  Her mother passed because a bedsore was infected with feces.

  • Carlyle Must Solve Problems in Manor Care Homes. December 21, 2007
    Carlyle Group owns Manor Care and must improve care for their residents. Staffing must be increased and deficiencies must be addressed.  Advocates, regulators, and law makers are concerned about profit-driven private companies acquiring nursing homes and the effect on the fragile seniors.

  • An In-Depth Look at State Nursing Home Regulations
    NHRegsPlus provides state regulations related to nursing homes. This site can be used to: “learn about regulations governing a particular state, or learn about how a particular topic is handled nationwide, or consult federal regulations and codes.” 

  • Democrats Seek Info on Bad Nursing Homes
    The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services published a list of 54 nursing homes that were named the worst in their state.  Democrat lawmakers are pushing the Bush Administration to release the names of more troubled nursing homes.

Motorcycle and Truck Accidents

  • Gooding Settlement Notice
  • A Legal Notice of a class action settlement involving bodily injury claims under Grange auto policies with Uninsured Motorist/Underinsured Motorist coverage. This settlement includes everyone: (1) who submitted a bodily injury claim under the UM/UIM provisions of a Grange auto policy from January 1, 1999 through December 12, 2007; (2) who received payment from Grange for the UM/UIM bodily injury claim; and (3) the COLOSSUS software was consulted by Grange in the resolution of the UM/UIM bodily injury claim. The settlement includes these Grange property and casualty insurers: Grange Indemnity Insurance Company, Grange Insurance Company of Michigan, Grange Mutual Casualty Company, Grange Property & Casualty Insurance Company, Integrity Mutual Insurance Company, and Trustgard Insurance Company.

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Verdicts & Settlements

Thursday, September 9, 2010

$150,000 settlement for an 85 year old Alzheimer patient who died from malnutrition. The patient lost 90lbs. over a period of months because no one on the staff fed him, or monitored his condition. When his condition was discovered, no staff member consulted with a physician.

$250,000 settlement for a patient who developed decubitus ulcers, which led to pulmonary vascular disease. The onset of this disease resulted in his leg being amputated.

$125,000 settlement for an 85 year old Alzheimer patient who was known to wander off. The nursing home was using temporary staff members who never read the patient's chart. As a result, they never activated a wander guard and alarm. The patient got out of bed and fell sustaining a fatal head injury.

$150,000 settlement for an 89 year old nursing home resident who sustained fatal injuries when she fell out of bed onto the floor. The nursing home said she had left the bed on her own. However, an investigation of the nursing home records revealed that on 67 prior occasions she was checked while in bed and had never moved on her own. The only conclusion to be reached was that someone dropped her. The case was settled prior to trial

$150,000 settlement for the death of an 88 year old nursing home resident who developed an decubitus ulcer. He died because the staff did not to properly monitor his condition and failed to follow their own internal policies and procedures for care and treatment.

Represented a 19 year-old double amputation victim. While riding a motorcycle when struck by another vehicle resulting in a policy limits settlement.

Represented a 35 year-old husband and wife who were struck on a motorcycle while stopped at a light at an intersection, resulting in multiple pelvic, leg, and arm fractures. The case settled for $650,000.

Represented a 26 year-old male who was struck on a motorcycle by a motorist making an illegal left turn, resulting in severe traumatic brain injury, requiring occupational therapy, physical therapy and speech therapy. The case settled for $250,000 policy limits.

Settled a quadriplegic truck accident for damages in excess of $1,000,000 liability insurance limits.

Have litigated and tried to verdict several cases involving trucks stopped on roadways without adequate warning.

Settled improper loading and failure to secure load cases.

Litigated and settled many truck vs. auto cases resulting in over one million dollars in settlements.

$150,000 settlement for an 85 year old Alzheimer patient who died from malnutrition.

Settled a quadriplegic truck accident case for damages in excess of $1,000,000 liability insurance limits.

$250,000 settlement for a patient who developed decubitus ulcers, which led to pulmonary vascular disease and the amputation of his leg.

$650,000 settlement for a 35 year-old husband and wife who were struck on a motorcycle, resulting in multiple pelvic, leg, and arm fractures.

$150,000 settlement for the death of an 88 year old nursing home resident who developed an decubitus ulcer.

Represented a 26 year-old male who was struck on a motorcycle by a motorist making an illegal left turn, resulting in severe traumatic brain injury. The case settled for $250,000 policy limits.


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