Pressure ulcers aren’t just an unfortunate medical outcome. In long-term care, they can reflect breakdowns in everyday safety practices—especially when residents need frequent repositioning, skin checks, and timely wound response.
In a community like Casa Grande, families often encounter the same practical problems:
- Residents transferred from hospitals with limited mobility and new care instructions
- Long stretches between family visits, making early warning signs easier to miss
- Care handoffs between nursing staff shifts, where documentation gaps can matter
When the record suggests the facility recognized risk but didn’t follow through with prevention or escalation, negligence may be on the table.


