In long-term care, pressure ulcers often don’t appear overnight. They typically develop after sustained pressure, friction, or shearing—especially for residents who:
- can’t reposition themselves
- have reduced sensation (neuropathy, diabetes, etc.)
- spend long hours in bed or in a chair
- need assistance with toileting and hygiene
In real Jonesboro cases, families commonly report a pattern like this: a resident seems fine at one visit, then redness shows up later, and the facility’s response feels delayed or vague. The legal value usually comes down to whether the facility can show that it:
- identified risk early,
- followed the care plan consistently,
- documented skin checks and wound progression clearly, and
- escalated treatment when the condition worsened.
If the timeline is missing, inconsistent, or overly generic, that’s often where an attorney starts digging.


