Pressure ulcers don’t typically happen overnight. They usually develop when a resident is left in the same position too long, isn’t checked frequently enough, or doesn’t receive the right skin assessments and wound care once risk is identified.
In Benton—and across Arkansas—families often face a similar pattern:
- The resident’s mobility changes after an illness, surgery, or hospitalization.
- Early skin redness may be documented inconsistently.
- Family concerns are raised at the bedside, but the care plan doesn’t seem to adjust quickly.
- When the ulcer becomes visible, the records may show delays, gaps, or “we monitored” notes that don’t match the clinical reality.
A lawyer helps translate what you observed and what the facility documented into a case theory focused on reasonable care and causation.


