Pressure ulcers often develop when a resident is left in the same position too long, skin checks are delayed, moisture/hygiene needs aren’t met, or wound care doesn’t match the resident’s risk level.
In many Arkansas facilities, the defense is the same: the injury “could have happened anyway” because of age, mobility limits, diabetes, poor circulation, or other medical conditions.
Our job is to test that explanation against the timeline:
- Was the resident assessed for pressure-risk when they should have been?
- Were skin checks documented at the required frequency?
- Did the care plan call for repositioning or special support surfaces?
- Were those steps actually carried out—or only written down?
Those details matter because negligence isn’t about one bad day. It’s often about repeated failures that allow a preventable injury to progress.


