South Carolina Nursing Home Wrongful Death Lawyer

South Carolina Nursing Home Wrongful Death Lawyer

FREE CONSULTATIONS WITH AWARD-WINNING ATTORNEYS

When Negligent Care Costs a Life, Your Family Deserves Justice.

IT COSTS YOU NOTHING

We Only Get Paid If You Do.

PPC Header Form

  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

PROVEN RESULTS FOR SOUTH CAROLINA FAMILIES

Fighting for Victims of Nursing Home, Assisted Living & Elder Abuse

0 +


Elder abuse and care facility cases resolved across South Carolina

0 +


Cases resolved for more than $100,000 for victims and their families


Your family deserves a legal team with a track record of holding negligent facilities accountable.

SCHEDULE A FREE CONSULTATION

or call us directly at (843) 881-8644

Awards

Avvo Rating
Million Dollar Advocates Forum
Top 25 Motor Vehicle Trial Lawyers
10 Best Attorney
National Trial Lawyers Top 100
Top 10 Award

Losing a family member is devastating. Learning that their death could have been prevented — that it happened because a nursing home, assisted living facility, hospital, or hospice program failed to provide basic, competent care — transforms grief into something far more painful.

Wrongful death claims in South Carolina’s elder care context arise when a facility’s negligence directly contributes to a resident’s death. These cases often involve bedsores that progressed to sepsis, falls that caused fatal head injuries, dehydration and malnutrition that led to organ failure, infections that went untreated, medication errors, and failure to respond to medical emergencies. In every case, the central question is the same: did the facility provide the standard of care that the law requires?

Hughey Law Firm represents families across South Carolina in wrongful death cases against nursing homes, assisted living facilities, hospitals, hospice providers, and home health care agencies. We understand that no amount of money can replace your loved one, but holding the facility accountable can provide a measure of justice and help prevent the same thing from happening to other families. Call (843) 881-8644 for a free, confidential consultation.

Common Causes of Wrongful Death in Care Facilities

  • Sepsis from untreated bedsores: Advanced pressure ulcers can lead to systemic infection that becomes fatal if not caught and treated promptly.
  • Fatal fall injuries: Hip fractures, traumatic brain injuries, and internal bleeding from falls can cause death directly or trigger a cascade of complications.
  • Dehydration and malnutrition: Chronic failure to provide adequate food and fluids can lead to organ failure and death.
  • Choking and aspiration: Failure to follow dietary restrictions or provide supervised eating for residents with swallowing difficulties can be fatal.
  • Medication errors: Overdoses, dangerous drug interactions, and failure to administer critical medications can directly cause death.
  • Infections: UTIs, pneumonia, and wound infections that go untreated or are treated too late can become fatal.
  • Elopement: Residents with dementia who leave a facility unsupervised may die from exposure, traffic injuries, drowning, or other causes.
  • Failure to respond to emergencies: Delayed response to falls, cardiac events, strokes, or respiratory distress can be the difference between life and death.

INJURED? LET US HELP YOU GET JUSTICE. FREE CONSULTATION. NO FEES UNLESS WE WIN YOUR CASE.

Who Can File a Wrongful Death Claim in South Carolina?

Under South Carolina law (SC Code § 15-51-10 et seq.), a wrongful death action is brought by the personal representative of the deceased’s estate on behalf of the estate and the statutory beneficiaries. Beneficiaries typically include:

  • The surviving spouse
  • The surviving children
  • If there is no surviving spouse or children, the surviving parents
  • If none of the above, the heirs at law

Recoverable damages in a wrongful death case may include:

  • Medical expenses incurred between the negligent act and death
  • Funeral and burial expenses
  • Pain and suffering the decedent experienced before death (survival action)
  • Loss of companionship and emotional support
  • Mental anguish of surviving family members
  • Punitive damages where the facility’s conduct was willful, reckless, or grossly negligent

Why Wrongful Death Cases Require Immediate Action

In wrongful death cases involving care facilities, time-sensitive evidence is critical. Facilities know that when a resident dies, a lawsuit may follow, and some take steps to protect themselves:

  • Staffing records may be overwritten on a rolling schedule
  • Surveillance footage is often stored for only 30 days before being deleted
  • Medical records can be altered after the fact
  • Witness memories fade, and staff members may leave the facility
  • Incident reports may be filed in a way that minimizes the facility’s responsibility

Contacting an attorney as soon as possible after your loved one’s death allows your legal team to send a spoliation letter demanding that the facility preserve all relevant evidence. This single step can make or break a wrongful death case.

Your Family Deserves Answers and Accountability. Get Your Free Consultation.

If your loved one died due to abuse or neglect in a South Carolina nursing home, assisted living facility, hospital, or other care setting, Hughey Law Firm can help your family pursue justice.

(843) 881-8644

All initial consultations are completely free and confidential, and we only get paid out of proceeds from any verdict or settlement we are able to win on your behalf.

VERDICTS & SETTLEMENTS

Frequently Asked Questions

South Carolina law gives you three years from the date of death to file a wrongful death lawsuit. However, waiting is risky. Evidence in care facility cases — including staffing logs, surveillance footage, and medical records — can be destroyed or overwritten quickly. We recommend contacting an attorney as soon as possible so that a preservation letter can be sent to the facility.

A wrongful death claim compensates the family for their losses (loss of companionship, funeral expenses, etc.). A survival action compensates the estate for what the deceased experienced before death — the pain, suffering, and medical expenses between the negligent act and the death. In South Carolina, both claims are often pursued together in care facility cases.

Yes. Wrongful death claims can be filed against any care provider whose negligence contributed to the death, including nursing homes, assisted living facilities, hospitals, hospice programs, and home health care agencies.

Many nursing homes include arbitration clauses in their admission contracts. These clauses are not always enforceable, especially when the resident lacked the capacity to understand what they were signing, when the clause was buried in admission paperwork under pressure, or when the claim involves wrongful death. An attorney can evaluate whether the arbitration clause in your case is valid.

Nothing upfront, and nothing out of pocket at any point during your case. We handle every case on a contingency fee basis. If we do not win your case, you owe us nothing. Call (843) 881-8644 for a free, confidential consultation.

Video Recommendations

Testimonial

Hospital and Nursing Home Malpractice

Video Preview:
Testimonial

Wrongful Death

Video Preview:
Testimonial

Wrongful Death

Video Preview: