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Nursing Home Hip Fractures

Many of us strive to see our family members live lives that are long. This can be tempered by a desire to see them live their golden years in good health and free of pain.

There is a strong association between fractures in the hips, and a quality of living that is diminished among elderly individuals, which emphasizes the need for practitioners who take care of our family members to take additional steps required to prevent drops and falls.

If a member of your family has suffered from nursing home hip fractures, that individual could be subject to a challenging recovery, and maybe even a prognosis that is unfavorable.

Personal injury attorneys appreciate the effect a hip with fractures can have on a patient in a nursing home. The attorneys routinely prosecute lawsuits for nursing home negligence that involve a fractured hip.

Hip Injuries Among the Most Severe with the Elderly

The mobility of patients who are elderly is connected to hips; over the last decade, these studies were conducted.


When patients suffer from nursing home hip fractures, this can have an effect on the joint, and surrounding tissue and bone.

This can result in a challenge to move, and excruciating pain if bones are grinding up against one another.

Among the most vastly recommended solutions is intervention in surgery in which the joint or bone is replaced with implants.

While surgery can prove to extend the lives of individuals who opt to undergo these procedures, there is data conflicting which suggests it is much better for a family member never to have to suffer fractures in the hip.

About 33% of elderly patients who sustain hip fractures within six months become deceased.

Compared to men, women are significantly less apt to suffer the same fate. About 50% of elderly man who sustained hip fractures die less than six months later.

Of those living independently on his or her own, or at the home of a family member, 80% of those survived much longer than one year subsequent to a hip fracture.

About 50% of those in nursing homes passed away within one year.

Nearly 30% of survivors lack mobility subsequent to sustained injuries, and require a level necessary for personal care.

This can include assistance to move from beds to restrooms with access, personal hygiene, and bathing.

Lack of mobility has offered proof to shorten the lives of patients as a result of medical concerns.

When a patient opts not to undergo procedures of surgery subsequent to a hip fracture, their likelihood and quality of living in survival can quickly diminish.

This data advocates the use of means of surgery to address fractures in the hip, but the recent filed torts against manufacturers of hip replacement may entice you to use caution in approaching these procedures.

You may be entitled to receive compensation necessary to provide your family member with first rate care, subsequent to nursing home hip fractures, in order to live throughout the remainder of his or her life in dignity and comfort.

Contact us for a free consultation or call Anzalone Law Firm PLLC, at: 603.548.3797.

Client Reviews
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Great lawyer...Professional, organized, caring and effective. Michael is very informative and was always willing to explain the reasons behind what was being done. Can't say enough about how helpful he was every step of the way. It was really nice to feel like I actually understood what was going on with my case. Catherine Veilleux