What Is a Nursing Home Abuse Lawyers in Myrtle Beach, SC Case?

Roden Law represents nursing home residents and their families in Myrtle Beach and across the Grand Strand — Murrells Inlet, Conway, Surfside Beach, Pawleys Island, and Georgetown. As one of the fastest-growing retirement destinations in the Southeast, the Grand Strand has a heavy concentration of long-term-care and assisted-living facilities — and when neglect or abuse […]

— Reviewed by Graeham C. Gillin, Partner, COO at Roden Law

Key Takeaways

If you were injured in a nursing home abuse in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina, you generally have 3 years from the date of injury to file a lawsuit (S.C. Code § 15-3-530). South Carolina follows a modified comparative negligence rule — you can still recover as long as you are Modified — recover if less than 51% at fault, with your award reduced by your percentage of fault. There is no cap on compensatory damages in an ordinary South Carolina injury case. Roden Law represents Myrtle Beach injury victims on a contingency fee: the consultation is free and there is no fee unless we win.

Roden Law represents nursing home residents and their families in Myrtle Beach and across the Grand Strand — Murrells Inlet, Conway, Surfside Beach, Pawleys Island, and Georgetown. As one of the fastest-growing retirement destinations in the Southeast, the Grand Strand has a heavy concentration of long-term-care and assisted-living facilities — and when neglect or abuse harms a loved one, how the claim is framed can determine whether damage caps apply at all. We handle every case on a contingency fee basis: you pay nothing unless we win. Roden Law has recovered more than $300 million for injured clients across Georgia and South Carolina and holds a 4.9-star average from hundreds of client reviews. Call (843) 612-1980 for a free, confidential case review.

Why Choose Roden Law for a Grand Strand Nursing Home Abuse Claim

Facilities and their insurers move quickly to protect themselves — often invoking arbitration clauses buried in admission paperwork and characterizing every claim as medical malpractice to trigger the damage cap. What separates Roden Law is direct attorney involvement and careful pleading that preserves the theories which escape the cap. We prepare Horry County cases for the courthouse in Conway and handle Georgetown County matters as well.

  • No fee unless we win — free consultation and no out-of-pocket cost to investigate.
  • We contest arbitration clauses — pre-dispute arbitration agreements in admission packets are routinely challenged.
  • Cap-aware pleading — ordinary-negligence and intentional-tort theories can keep your case out from under the medical-malpractice cap.

Grand Strand Nursing Home Harms We Handle

The Grand Strand’s large and growing retirement population fills numerous long-term-care and assisted-living facilities across Horry and Georgetown counties, and the harms our attorneys see most include:

  • Falls and fractures from inadequate supervision and unsafe conditions.
  • Pressure ulcers (bedsores) caused by immobility and neglect.
  • Malnutrition and dehydration from understaffing and inattention.
  • Medication errors — wrong drug, wrong dose, or missed doses.
  • Wandering and elopement when residents leave unsupervised.
  • Physical, sexual, and emotional abuse by staff or other residents.

South Carolina Nursing Home Law You Should Know

A nursing home claim can be built on several theories: ordinary negligence, professional (medical) negligence, statutory violations, and intentional torts such as battery or elder abuse. South Carolina’s Omnibus Adult Protection Act (S.C. Code § 43-35-5 et seq.) informs the standard of care owed to vulnerable adults. The framing matters: if a claim is characterized as medical malpractice, the non-economic damages cap under S.C. Code § 15-32-220 — roughly $596,001 per provider or institution and about $1,788,003 in aggregate as of 2026, adjusted annually — may apply. But ordinary-negligence and intentional-tort theories generally escape that cap, which is why the pleading decision is so important. The deadline is generally three years (S.C. Code § 15-3-530), and if a resident dies, wrongful-death and survival claims may arise. Learn more from our South Carolina comparative negligence guide, and if a loved one has died, our South Carolina wrongful death lawyers can help.

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What to Do After A nursing home abuse in Myrtle Beach, SC

  1. Ensure safety and call 911. Move to a safe location if possible. Call emergency services to report the accident and request medical attention for anyone injured.
  2. Seek immediate medical attention. Even if injuries seem minor, get examined by a doctor. Some injuries — such as traumatic brain injuries or internal bleeding — may not show symptoms immediately.
  3. Document the scene. Take photos of all vehicles, injuries, road conditions, traffic signs, and any visible damage. Collect names and contact information from witnesses.
  4. Exchange information with all parties. Get the other driver's name, insurance information, license plate number, and driver's license number. Do not admit fault or apologize.
  5. Report the accident to police. South Carolina law requires accident reports when there are injuries or significant property damage. Request a copy of the police report.
  6. Notify your insurance company. Report the accident to your insurer promptly. Provide factual information only — do not speculate about fault or the extent of your injuries.
  7. Contact an experienced personal injury attorney. An attorney can protect your rights, handle communications with insurance companies, and help you pursue the full compensation you deserve. Roden Law offers free consultations — call today.

South Carolina Personal Injury Law

Statute of Limitations 3 years (S.C. Code § 15-3-530)
Comparative Fault Modified — recover if less than 51% at fault

Filing a Personal Injury Case in Myrtle Beach

Filing a personal injury case in the Myrtle Beach market means filing in Horry County Court of Common Pleas at 1301 Second Avenue in Conway, where civil complaints are submitted through South Carolina’s mandatory Tyler Odyssey e-filing system and most cases are routed to mediation before trial under SC ADR Rule 3.

The Grand Strand draws roughly 17–20 million visitors a year, and that seasonal surge reshapes the local crash picture: US-17 Business and Ocean Boulevard see heavy pedestrian and golf-cart traffic, while drivers choose between the slower, congested US-501 and the faster but higher-severity SC-22 Conway Bypass to reach the beach. Golf carts add a wrinkle unique to coastal SC — under S.C. Code § 56-2-100, a permitted cart may only operate in daylight, within four miles of the owner’s address, on roads posted 35 mph or less, by a licensed driver. Crashes outside those limits open the door to negligence-per-se and rental-property claims. Severe-injury victims are routed to Grand Strand Medical Center in Myrtle Beach or stabilized at Tidelands Waccamaw in Murrells Inlet.

South Carolina applies a three-year statute of limitations under S.C. Code § 15-3-530, a 51% modified-comparative-fault bar, and allows stacking of UM/UIM coverage — often the largest recovery source when an out-of-state tourist is hit by a minimum-limits driver.

Do I Have a Nursing home abuse Case in Myrtle Beach?

Nursing home claims sound in professional negligence (sometimes med-mal-adjacent), ordinary negligence, statutory violations, and — for intentional misconduct — battery and elder-abuse torts. The federal Nursing Home Reform Act, 42 U.S.C. § 1395i-3 / § 1396r, and CMS regulations at 42 C.F.R. Part 483 establish baseline standards of care that support negligence-per-se theories. Pre-dispute arbitration agreements are routine and heavily contested under *Marmet Health Care Center v. Brown*, 565 U.S. 530 (2012). South Carolina treats most nursing-home claims as professional negligence requiring a Notice of Intent to File Suit and an expert affidavit under S.C. Code § 15-79-125; ordinary-negligence theories (e.g., understaffing, falls without medical judgment) sometimes escape that requirement.

Types of Compensation in South Carolina Nursing home abuse Cases

Damages include past and future medical care, pain and suffering, and — critically — elder-abuse statutory damages and punitives. South Carolina’s Omnibus Adult Protection Act (S.C. Code § 43-35-5 et seq.) informs the standard of care. South Carolina’s $350,000 / $1.05M noneconomic cap (S.C. Code § 15-32-220) applies if the claim is characterized as medical malpractice; ordinary-negligence and intentional-tort theories escape the cap, which is a key strategic decision in pleading. Wrongful-death claims under South Carolina law often substantially exceed the underlying nursing-home claim value.

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Roden Law Nursing Home Abuse Lawyers in Myrtle Beach, SC Results at a Glance

$300M+ Recovered for injured clients across Georgia and South Carolina
4.9 / 5.0 Average client rating across hundreds of verified Google reviews from our six offices
5,000+ Cases successfully handled since 2013
62 years Combined attorney experience across 5 office locations

Source: Roden Law firm records and verified Google Business Profile reviews, updated July 2026.

Our Myrtle Beach Attorneys

Recent Case Results

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Results shown are gross settlement/verdict amounts before fees and costs. Past results do not guarantee similar outcomes.

About the Author

Graeham C. Gillin, Partner, COO at Roden Law

Graeham C. Gillin

Partner, COO

Frequently Asked Questions

Contact Our Myrtle Beach Office Today

If you were injured in Myrtle Beach and believe another party is at fault, contact us for a free, no-obligation review. Call (843) 612-1980 — no upfront cost.