Solon is a suburban community where many adult children juggle work, schools, and travel time to visit aging parents. That means families often first notice changes during the window between visits—when a loved one looks thinner, seems more tired after meals, or shows new signs like confusion, constipation, frequent infections, or slow wound healing.
Facilities sometimes respond with vague reassurance (“they’re being encouraged,” “they’re eating as tolerated”) while the underlying systems—hydration plans, intake monitoring, dietitian oversight, and escalation procedures—remain inconsistent.
A lawyer’s job is to separate what you observed from what the facility documented, then connect the gaps to the medical consequences that followed.


