Family question
What if my parent has dementia and cannot explain what happened?
You can still investigate. Focus on objective records: photos, hospital findings, care plans, staff assignments, prior behavior, roommate or visitor observations, medication changes, and whether the facility documented and investigated the event.
How to think about this
What Florida families should know
If there is a safety or rights concern, the Florida ombudsman or AHCA complaint process may help even when the resident cannot give a clear narrative.
What to do now
Get appropriate medical care, document the resident's condition, save photos and records if appropriate, write down staff conversations, and avoid signing broad releases until you understand your options.
Write a short timeline with dates, symptoms, staff names, hospital transfers, and what the facility said.
Save photos, discharge papers, text messages, voicemail, names of witnesses, and any written facility communication.
Request the care plan, nursing notes, incident reports, medication records, relevant logs, and hospital records.
Look up the facility profile and inspection history before a free lawyer consultation so the conversation is more focused.
Records to save
Questions an attorney may ask
- What was the resident's condition before the injury or decline?
- What risk did the facility know about before the event?
- What did the care plan require staff to do?
- What did records show staff actually did or failed to do?
- What injury, hospitalization, diagnosis, or death followed?
When to ask for help
Consider a prompt review if there was a serious injury, hospitalization, pressure injury, fracture, infection, dehydration, malnutrition, sexual or physical abuse concern, repeated falls, elopement, or death.
Helpful next pages
Related guides
Neglect warning sign
Pressure Ulcers and Bed Sores
Resident safety
Falls, Fractures, and Brain Bleeds
Basic care neglect
Dehydration, Malnutrition, and Failure to Thrive
Medication safety
Medication Errors
Dementia care
Wandering and Elopement
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.

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.
Official records and guidance
Sources used on this page
These sources help families check facility histories, resident rights, inspection issues, reporting options, and the records that may matter after a serious injury or sudden decline. They are not a substitute for medical or legal advice.