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When you place your family member in a nursing home, you are entrusting their well-being to that facility and believing their staff will provide your loved one with the quality of care they deserve. But if instead, your loved one suffers fatal harm due to negligence or abuse, you may wonder what legal actions you can take for their wrongful death.
At PKSD, our experienced nursing home injury attorneys in Milwaukee understand the complex emotions and legal challenges families face after the preventable loss of a loved one in long-term care. While no amount of money can change what has happened, it can help to pay for medical costs and the pain and suffering your loved one experienced.
Not sure if you have a case? Contact our law offices for a FREE consultation. We welcome your questions and the opportunity to learn more about your situation. During this review, we can also help you understand what legal options you may have.
Call PKSD today. Let our family help yours. 414-333-3333.
The short answer is yes – you may be able to seek compensation for damages if a nursing home’s negligence or abuse ultimately caused your loved one’s death. However, you must be able to prove what happened, and strict filing deadlines apply. Given the complex nature of nursing home wrongful death claims, we strongly recommend seeking legal help to make sure your rights and best interests are protected during the legal process.
At PKSD, we have a strong history of success, and our knowledgeable legal team is ready to get to work on your behalf right away.
Nursing homes may be liable if their actions or inactions cause a resident to suffer fatal harm that could have been prevented with proper care.
These are some examples of negligent or abusive care in a nursing home:
Under Wisconsin law, it is not enough to suspect your loved one’s death was the result of their nursing home’s negligent or abusive actions.
To have a case, your attorney must be able to establish these key elements:
At PKSD, we can review the circumstances of your situation in a free consultation to determine whether you may have a case.
You have three years from the date your loved one died to file a wrongful death lawsuit in Wisconsin. If you miss this deadline, you lose your right to file a lawsuit, no matter how strong your case is. The time to file a lawsuit starts immediately when death occurs, not when you discover the negligence or realize you might have a case.
Three years may sound like a long time, but it is vital to the success of your case that you seek legal help right away. These cases are extremely complex, and it takes time to build a solid case. Evidence disappears quickly, security footage gets deleted, medical records become harder to get, and staff members leave or forget what happened. In short, the longer you wait, the weaker your case becomes, and the harder it is to prove what happened.
If you suspect negligent or abuse led to your loved one’s death, it is in your best interests to seek legal help right away.
Wisconsin law limits who can file a wrongful death lawsuit to protect against multiple family members suing for the same death. Only specific people have legal “standing” to bring these claims, and it depends on who survived your loved one.
Grandchildren, siblings, aunts, uncles, and other relatives are generally not able to file a wrongful death claim, even if they were close to your loved one or provided care. The law focuses on direct family relationships.
Your loved one’s spouse has the primary right to file a wrongful death lawsuit, even if they are separated. If there is no surviving spouse, then adult children can file the claim together. Your loved one’s parents may be eligible to sue if the victim had no spouse or children, and if the deceased was an adult.
If your loved one named someone in their will, that person might be able to file a wrongful death claim on behalf of the estate. Sometimes, adult children who are adopted still have the right to sue. In some cases, stepchildren do not unless they are legally adopted.
The compensation for any injury case, including wrongful death, varies significantly based on multiple factors. Generally, these are the types of damages you may be able to seek on your loved one’s behalf:
To prove your loved one’s death was the result of nursing home negligence or the abusive actions of a caregiver or another resident, you will need evidence. In a nursing home wrongful death case, evidence may include:
One critical factor that gives your wrongful death claim an optimal chance for success is not waiting to seek legal help. At PKSD, we can send preservation letters to the nursing home, to ensure they do not destroy or alter essential records, like surveillance footage, that could help your case.
When nursing homes fail to provide proper care, resulting in a loved one’s death, Wisconsin law allows families to seek compensation. These cases require quick action and specialized legal knowledge to build a strong claim.
PKSD handles nursing home wrongful death cases and fights for the justice you and your loved one deserve. We handle the legal work so you can focus on your family during this challenging time. Contact our office or fill out our contact form today to schedule a complimentary consultation about your case.
Call our trusted law firm today: 414-333-3333.
This page has been written, edited, and reviewed by a team of legal writers following our comprehensive editorial guidelines. This page was approved by attorney Jeffery A. Pitman, who has more than 28 years of legal experience and handled thousands of personal injury cases while obtaining millions of dollars in verdicts and settlements in Wisconsin, Illinois, Iowa and New Mexico.
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