Pressure ulcers rarely appear “out of nowhere.” They typically develop after sustained pressure, friction, or shearing—conditions that require consistent prevention steps.
In many Scottsboro cases, families tell us they noticed changes after:
- A resident returned from a hospital stay and care needs increased, but the facility’s skin monitoring didn’t tighten.
- Family visits became less frequent due to work or transportation schedules, and early redness wasn’t documented.
- Wound care updates were inconsistent between nursing notes, physician orders, and family-reported observations.
That’s why the timeline matters. Your lawyer will look for a match between:
- Admission risk level (or whether risk was assessed at all)
- First documentation of redness, blanching changes, drainage, or open areas
- The presence (or absence) of prevention measures like repositioning, skin checks, moisture management, and appropriate wound treatment
If the record shows risk factors were known yet care lagged, it can support a claim—regardless of how “medical” the facility tries to make the story.


