In Flowood, many families manage caregiving around work schedules tied to the metro area—morning drop-offs, evening commutes, and limited windows to visit. That reality can make it easier for warning signs to be missed or minimized.
But dehydration and malnutrition don’t appear overnight in most cases. Families commonly report patterns like:
- intake and weight changes that were noticed “eventually,” not promptly
- vague charting that doesn’t reflect actual cups of fluid, portion sizes, or assistance provided
- delays in calling a provider after appetite/thirst complaints
- care-plan updates that lag behind the resident’s real condition
A lawyer’s job is to translate what you saw into the evidence that matters—so the facility can’t rely on hindsight or incomplete documentation.


