Research help for families worried about nursing home abuse or neglect

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New Jersey facility research

New Jersey nursing home abuse and neglect help

If your parent was hurt, neglected, hospitalized, or suddenly declined in a New Jersey nursing home, this page helps your family move from fear to organized facts. Compare CMS-listed facilities, county pages, city pages, warning signs, public inspection indicators, complaint resources, and records to request.

Short answer

How should I start researching nursing home abuse in New Jersey?

Start with the exact facility, what changed with your loved one, and the records that can prove the timeline. Public CMS and state sources help you ask better questions, but the resident's care plan, hospital records, photos, and family timeline decide the real review.

Find the facility and local page
Save the resident timeline and records
Use public data as context, not proof

CMS-listed facilities

348

Certified beds

50981

Complaint deficiencies

218

Facilities with fines

136

Full family answer

How to research nursing home abuse and neglect in New Jersey

New Jersey nursing-home research should start with a practical truth: families usually arrive with a symptom, a phone call, a hospital transfer, or a change in personality, not a neatly labeled legal claim. A parent may have fallen, developed a wound, stopped eating, become confused, gone to the hospital with sepsis, been found outside, received the wrong medication, or become afraid of a staff member or another resident. The state page is meant to help the family move from that first worry to an organized review. It connects 348 CMS-listed facilities with county pages, city pages, facility profiles, official complaint paths, ombudsman resources, warning-sign guides, and records families should request.

The reason public records matter is that nursing-home cases are rarely proved by one fact. A CMS rating, complaint deficiency, abuse icon, staffing number, fine, ownership field, or inspection date can be useful, but only when it is compared with the resident's own story. A poor inspection history does not automatically prove what happened to one resident. A high rating does not automatically rule out neglect. The useful question is narrower: does the public record show the same kind of risk that appears in the family timeline, such as falls, pressure injuries, infection control, medication safety, poor hygiene, delayed treatment, wandering, choking, abuse reporting, or staffing problems?

Families should also understand the difference between state-wide research, local research, and facility-specific proof. This New Jersey hub helps families identify the right county, city, and facility profile. The county and city pages help compare nearby facilities. The individual facility page helps collect CMS fields and official source links in one place. But the resident-specific review still depends on documents that do not appear in a public directory: the care plan, risk assessments, nursing notes, incident reports, treatment records, medication administration records, hospital records, photos, family messages, witness names, and a dated timeline of what changed.

A strong first review usually asks three questions. First, what risk was known before the injury or decline? That might include dementia, prior falls, poor intake, incontinence, wounds, infection history, swallowing problems, medication changes, behavioral concerns, or dependence on staff for transfers, meals, toileting, and hygiene. Second, what did the facility plan to do about that risk? The answer should appear in assessments, care plans, orders, staffing assignments, treatment records, and monitoring notes. Third, what happened after the warning sign appeared? Families should look for physician notification, family notification, vital signs, wound measurements, neuro checks after falls, hospital transfer timing, EMS records, discharge papers, and whether the care plan changed afterward.

The cited sources on these pages are included to keep the research anchored. CMS Care Compare and CMS provider data help identify facility-level facts. Federal nursing-home rules help explain resident rights, abuse and neglect prevention, care planning, quality of care, nursing services, pharmacy services, and infection control. State complaint and ombudsman links help families understand where to report concerns or ask for advocacy. Medical and patient-safety sources help families recognize why a fall, pressure injury, sepsis event, medication problem, aspiration event, dehydration, malnutrition, or hygiene neglect may point to specific records. Public legal examples help explain procedure and proof, but they are comparisons, not predictions.

The safest way to use this hub is to work downward: state, county, city, facility, injury topic, records. Start with the place where care happened. Then choose the issue that most closely matches what your family saw. Then gather the documents that can prove or disprove the timeline. If the harm involved fracture, infected wound, sepsis, aspiration, medication toxicity, dehydration, malnutrition, elopement, assault, repeated ER visits, delayed treatment, or death, the family does not need to solve the legal question alone before asking for help. The immediate job is to protect the resident, preserve records, and make the story clear enough for the right attorney or intake team to review.

How to use this state page

Start with the facility, then connect the records to the injury.

Find the local facility

Use county and city pages to identify the nursing home and compare it with nearby public-record profiles.

Match public data to the family story

Look for the same kind of problem: falls, wounds, infection, medication, hygiene, choking, elopement, staffing, abuse reporting, or delayed transfer.

Preserve resident-specific proof

Save the care plan, incident report, hospital papers, photos, medication records, wound notes, witness names, and a dated timeline.

Public record data points

Public CMS signals across New Jersey

These numbers are useful once the immediate safety questions and resident timeline are clear. They are public-record context, not accusations, and they do not prove what happened to one resident.

Facilities

348

CMS-listed nursing homes in this state dataset.

County pages

21

Local county research paths for narrowing the facility list.

City pages

192

City-level pages for local abuse lawyer and facility searches.

Complaint signals

218

Facilities with recent complaint-related health deficiencies in CMS data.

Facilities with fines

136

Facilities where CMS lists one or more fines.

CMS abuse icon

14

Facilities marked with the CMS abuse icon in this provider dataset.

Relevant care standards

New Jersey pages connect local records to federal nursing-home rules

These federal sources help families ask better questions about resident rights, abuse and neglect prevention, care planning, quality of care, nursing services, pharmacy services, and infection control.

42 C.F.R. § 483.10

Resident rights

Federal nursing-home rules address resident dignity, self-determination, access to information, visitation, grievances, and participation in care planning.

Use this when the issue involves ignored family questions, restricted access, missing information, retaliation concerns, or a resident who was not treated with dignity.

Electronic Code of Federal Regulations

42 C.F.R. § 483.12

Freedom from abuse, neglect, and exploitation

Federal rules prohibit abuse, neglect, exploitation, and misappropriation of resident property, and require facilities to develop policies for prevention, reporting, and investigation.

Use this when the concern involves physical abuse, sexual abuse, staff violence, resident-on-resident assault, unexplained injuries, neglect, or a report that was not handled seriously.

Electronic Code of Federal Regulations

42 C.F.R. § 483.21

Comprehensive person-centered care planning

Federal rules require comprehensive care plans based on resident assessments, with services designed to meet medical, nursing, mental, and psychosocial needs.

Use this when a facility says an injury was unavoidable. Ask what the care plan required before the incident and what changed afterward.

Electronic Code of Federal Regulations

42 C.F.R. § 483.25

Quality of care

Federal quality-of-care rules address a facility's obligation to provide care and services that help residents attain or maintain their highest practicable well-being.

Use this for falls, pressure injuries, nutrition, hydration, mobility decline, infection concerns, avoidable pain, or a sudden change that staff did not escalate.

Electronic Code of Federal Regulations

42 C.F.R. § 483.35

Nursing services

Federal rules require sufficient nursing staff and licensed nursing services to meet resident needs based on resident assessments and care plans.

Use this when records mention short staffing, unanswered call lights, missed turning, missed toileting, delayed response, or no one watching a high-risk resident.

Electronic Code of Federal Regulations

42 C.F.R. § 483.45

Pharmacy services and medication safety

Federal pharmacy rules address medication regimen review, unnecessary drugs, psychotropic drugs, gradual dose reductions where applicable, and medication error rates.

Use this for sedation concerns, missed medications, wrong dose, anticoagulants, insulin, seizure medication, psychotropics, adverse drug events, or unexplained confusion.

Electronic Code of Federal Regulations

42 C.F.R. § 483.80

Infection prevention and control

Federal rules require an infection prevention and control program designed to help prevent, identify, report, investigate, and control infections and communicable diseases.

Use this when a wound, UTI, respiratory infection, aspiration pneumonia, fever, abnormal labs, or sepsis may not have been recognized or treated promptly.

Electronic Code of Federal Regulations

Medical evidence families can use

Medical warning signs that should shape the record request

Different injuries require different records. These sources help families connect symptoms to the care-plan, monitoring, escalation, and treatment questions that matter.

AHRQ pressure injury prevention resources

Pressure injuries and wound deterioration

Pressure injuries are patient-safety events that require risk assessment, prevention planning, skin checks, repositioning, nutrition, moisture management, and prompt treatment when skin breaks down.

Ask for skin assessments, Braden-style risk scores if used, turning and repositioning records, wound measurements, wound photos, treatment orders, nutrition records, infection notes, and transfer records.

Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality

CDC STEADI fall-prevention resources

Falls, fractures, and unwitnessed injuries

Fall prevention in older adults focuses on identifying risk factors, medications, gait and balance issues, prior falls, vision, cognition, environmental hazards, and follow-up after a fall.

Ask for fall-risk assessments, care-plan interventions, bed or chair alarm records, toileting plans, transfer assistance orders, incident reports, witness statements, and hospital imaging.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

CDC sepsis information

Infection, sepsis, and delayed escalation

Sepsis is a life-threatening emergency connected to infection. Older residents may decline quickly, and the key records often involve vital signs, symptoms, labs, cultures, treatment timing, and transfer decisions.

Ask for vital-sign sheets, fever notes, wound or UTI documentation, respiratory symptoms, lab results, physician notifications, antibiotic orders, and the time staff first considered hospital transfer.

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention

Federal pharmacy services rule

Medication errors and chemical-restraint concerns

Medication issues can involve wrong dose, missed dose, failure to monitor high-risk drugs, contraindications, unnecessary medications, or psychotropic drugs used inappropriately.

Ask for medication administration records, physician orders, pharmacy reviews, psychotropic consent and monitoring, blood sugar logs, INR or anticoagulant monitoring, seizure-medication levels, and adverse-event notes.

Electronic Code of Federal Regulations

Report a problem to FDA

Medication adverse-event and product-problem reporting

FDA provides public pathways for reporting problems involving drugs, biologics, medical devices, foods, cosmetics, and other regulated products, including adverse events and product quality concerns.

Use this when a medication error, adverse drug event, drug mix-up, labeling issue, or possible product problem needs to be separated from the nursing home's own medication-administration records.

U.S. Food and Drug Administration

Federal quality-of-care rule

Malnutrition, dehydration, and weight loss

Nutrition and hydration concerns often require comparing resident risk, weight records, intake monitoring, supplements, feeding assistance, swallowing issues, labs, and care-plan compliance.

Ask for weight logs, meal intake, fluid intake, diet orders, supplement orders, speech therapy notes, feeding-assistance records, labs, and notes explaining any significant decline.

Electronic Code of Federal Regulations

Federal resident-rights and quality-of-care rules

Hygiene, toileting, incontinence care, and dignity

Basic daily care can affect dignity, skin integrity, infection risk, continence, comfort, and preventable decline. Toileting and hygiene concerns should be compared with the resident's care plan and daily-care documentation.

Ask for toileting plans, shower sheets, bathing records, bowel logs, brief-change records if kept, skin checks, call-light records if available, care-plan revisions, physician notification, and family-notification notes.

Electronic Code of Federal Regulations

Federal quality-of-care rule

Aspiration, choking, and dysphagia

Choking and aspiration questions often turn on swallowing risk, diet texture, supervision during meals, speech therapy recommendations, and whether staff followed the ordered diet.

Ask for diet orders, swallow evaluations, speech therapy notes, meal supervision records, choking incident reports, aspiration-pneumonia records, and hospital transfer notes.

Electronic Code of Federal Regulations

Adult dysphagia information

Adult swallowing disorders and aspiration risk

ASHA explains adult swallowing disorders, warning signs, evaluation, treatment, diet changes, swallowing strategies, and complications such as aspiration and poor nutrition or hydration.

Use this when the chart mentions dysphagia, thickened liquids, pureed diet, coughing during meals, speech therapy, feeding assistance, aspiration precautions, or recurrent pneumonia.

American Speech-Language-Hearing Association

Wandering guidance

Dementia wandering and safety planning

The Alzheimer's Association describes wandering risk in dementia and practical safety planning, including supervision, routines, unmet needs, and reducing the chance that a person becomes lost.

Use this when a resident had dementia, exit-seeking, prior wandering, door-alarm issues, unsafe walking, elopement, exposure, injury, or a facility response that did not match known risk.

Alzheimer's Association

New Jersey county nursing home research

County pages help families narrow a broad search and compare nearby public facility indicators before focusing on a single nursing home profile.

New Jersey city nursing home abuse lawyer help

City pages are built for local searches and connect nursing homes in that city with records, warning signs, reporting options, and lawyer-review questions.

Toms River

9 facilities · Ocean County

Wayne

8 facilities · Passaic County

Voorhees

7 facilities · Camden County

Cherry Hill

6 facilities · Camden County

Edison

6 facilities · Middlesex County

Cedar Grove

5 facilities · Essex County

Freehold

5 facilities · Monmouth County

Jersey City

5 facilities · Hudson County

Lakewood

5 facilities · Ocean County

Newark

5 facilities · Essex County

Trenton

5 facilities · Mercer County

West Orange

5 facilities · Essex County

Brick

4 facilities · Ocean County

Bridgewater

4 facilities · Somerset County

East Orange

4 facilities · Essex County

Elizabeth

4 facilities · Union County

Moorestown

4 facilities · Burlington County

Newton

4 facilities · Sussex County

Old Bridge

4 facilities · Middlesex County

Paramus

4 facilities · Bergen County

Wall

4 facilities · Monmouth County

Whiting

4 facilities · Ocean County

Burlington

3 facilities · Burlington County

Cape May Court House

3 facilities · Cape May County

Galloway Township

3 facilities · Atlantic County

Hackensack

3 facilities · Bergen County

Hamilton

3 facilities · Mercer County

Lawrenceville

3 facilities · Mercer County

Livingston

3 facilities · Essex County

Monroe Township

3 facilities · Middlesex County

Morristown

3 facilities · Morris County

Neptune

3 facilities · Monmouth County

North Bergen

3 facilities · Hudson County

Paterson

3 facilities · Passaic County

Phillipsburg

3 facilities · Warren County

Plainfield

3 facilities · Union County

Sewell

3 facilities · Gloucester County

Somerset

3 facilities · Somerset County

Vineland

3 facilities · Cumberland County

Bayville

2 facilities · Ocean County

Berkeley Heights

2 facilities · Union County

Bridgeton

2 facilities · Cumberland County

Camden

2 facilities · Camden County

Cranford

2 facilities · Union County

Dover

2 facilities · Morris County

Eatontown

2 facilities · Monmouth County

Englewood

2 facilities · Bergen County

Florham Park

2 facilities · Morris County

Haskell

2 facilities · Passaic County

Hazlet

2 facilities · Monmouth County

Hillsborough

2 facilities · Somerset County

Holmdel

2 facilities · Monmouth County

Kearny

2 facilities · Hudson County

Lincoln Park

2 facilities · Morris County

Little Egg Harbor Tw

2 facilities · Ocean County

Manahawkin

2 facilities · Ocean County

Marlton

2 facilities · Burlington County

Medford

2 facilities · Burlington County

Montclair

2 facilities · Essex County

Mountainside

2 facilities · Union County

New Providence

2 facilities · Union County

North Cape May

2 facilities · Cape May County

Orange

2 facilities · Essex County

Passaic

2 facilities · Passaic County

Perth Amboy

2 facilities · Middlesex County

Rahway

2 facilities · Union County

Red Bank

2 facilities · Monmouth County

Ridgewood

2 facilities · Bergen County

Teaneck

2 facilities · Bergen County

Tinton Falls

2 facilities · Monmouth County

Union City

2 facilities · Hudson County

West Caldwell

2 facilities · Essex County

Absecon

1 facilities · Atlantic County

Allendale

1 facilities · Bergen County

Allenwood

1 facilities · Monmouth County

Atco

1 facilities · Camden County

Atlantic City

1 facilities · Atlantic County

Atlantic Highlands

1 facilities · Monmouth County

Barnegat

1 facilities · Ocean County

Basking Ridge

1 facilities · Somerset County

Facility profiles to review first

Profiles with stronger public follow-up signals

These are not accusations. They are profiles where CMS fields such as complaint deficiencies, fines, abuse icon, or one-star inspections make the public record worth reviewing first.

Official New Jersey and federal sources

These links are starting points. Public facility data should be compared with the resident chart, hospital records, photos, family timeline, and any state complaint or ombudsman records.

Legal research context

Public cases help explain proof, but they do not decide a family's case

These legal sources help families understand resident-rights procedure, arbitration paperwork, and how public legal examples should be used as comparisons rather than promises.

Health and Hospital Corp. of Marion County v. Talevski

Resident-rights claims can involve federal law

The Supreme Court addressed whether provisions of the Federal Nursing Home Reform Act could support a federal civil-rights claim against a public nursing facility.

This does not mean every nursing-home injury is a federal case. It shows why resident-rights statutes and facility ownership can matter in legal analysis.

U.S. Supreme Court / Oyez

Health and Hospital Corp. of Marion County v. Talevski

Primary Supreme Court opinions should anchor case-law research

The Court's opinion is the primary legal source for the Talevski resident-rights decision, which addressed whether certain Federal Nursing Home Reform Act rights could be enforced through a civil-rights claim.

Use the opinion as the anchor source, then use Oyez, SCOTUSblog, Justia, or FindLaw only to help translate the issue into plain English.

U.S. Supreme Court

Kindred Nursing Centers, L.P. v. Clark

Admission paperwork can affect where a dispute is heard

The Supreme Court addressed arbitration agreements signed with nursing-home admission documents.

Families should save admission papers, powers of attorney, arbitration agreements, consent forms, and facility contracts before a lawyer evaluates options.

U.S. Supreme Court / Oyez

Kindred Nursing Centers L.P. v. Clark

Arbitration clauses can change the path of a nursing-home claim

The official opinion explains why a state rule singling out arbitration agreements for special treatment conflicted with the Federal Arbitration Act.

If your admission packet contains an arbitration agreement, save it. A lawyer may need to evaluate who signed it, what authority they had, and whether the agreement affects court, arbitration, or settlement strategy.

U.S. Supreme Court

Kindred Nursing Centers analysis

Supreme Court explainers can help families understand procedure

SCOTUSblog's analysis explains the arbitration decision in practical terms and connects it to the Court's broader treatment of arbitration agreements.

Use this kind of source to understand the legal issue, but still keep the official opinion and your own admission paperwork as the important documents.

SCOTUSblog

Senior Justice Help is a public-information and facility-research website. We are not a law firm, medical provider, government agency, or nursing home regulator. We may help families understand what kind of lawyer to contact or connect with legal resources, but this site does not provide legal or medical advice.

Aron Solomon, JD reviewer headshot

Editorial review

Written and reviewed for family clarity

Written by: Senior Justice Help Editorial Team, Family questions and nursing home records research team

Reviewed by: Aron Solomon, JD, Legal commentator, writer, and editor

Last updated: June 23, 2026

Pages are written for families, checked against public agency sources, and reviewed for clarity, sourcing, and overclaiming. The site does not provide medical advice or legal advice.

Aron Solomon, JD, is listed by Muck Rack as a writer and editor with coverage areas including law, politics, marketing, business, and strategy. His public profile is linked for transparency.

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