Brunswick has a unique mix of healthcare needs driven by an aging population, frequent caregiver transitions, and the realities of long-term care staffing in the region. In practice, dehydration and malnutrition cases often turn on whether the facility responded quickly when a resident showed early risk—especially during periods when staffing is stretched or care handoffs are frequent.
Common Brunswick-area patterns families report include:
- “Off” days that weren’t escalated: a resident seems fine in the morning, then worsens after a shift change without documented reassessment.
- Intake not matching the story: charts may reflect that fluids or supplements were “offered,” but not whether the resident actually drank enough, required assistance, or refused despite prompting.
- Care-plan drift: after a hospitalization or medication change, the facility may fail to update hydration/nutrition strategies—or document that updates actually happened.
Those issues matter because Georgia law expects nursing homes to provide care that meets residents’ needs. When documentation and outcomes don’t line up, families deserve a careful legal review.


