Pressure ulcers can develop quickly—sometimes within days—when residents are left in the same position too long, when skin assessments are delayed, or when wound care orders aren’t carried out as written. In the Little Rock area, families frequently point to real-life stressors that can affect care consistency, such as:
- Frequent roommate/unit changes that disrupt routines
- Higher patient loads during shift changes (when documentation and handoffs matter)
- Sudden declines in mobility after illness or falls
- Long waits for specialist or wound-care input
These factors don’t automatically prove wrongdoing. But they can help explain why the timing of the injury matters—and why your case should focus on what the facility knew, when they knew it, and what they did in response.


