In Burkburnett and surrounding communities, families often rely on a facility’s routines: scheduled meal times, medication rounds, and regular wellness checks. When a resident’s appetite drops or they start refusing fluids, the early signs can be subtle—until they aren’t.
Nutrition-related neglect may be masked by documentation that describes what staff intended to do (e.g., “offered” or “encouraged”) rather than what the resident actually received—and whether the team responded quickly enough when intake was clearly inadequate.
The key issue is not whether dehydration or malnutrition happened—it’s whether the facility responded reasonably once risk was known or should have been recognized.


