Pressure ulcers are more than skin discoloration. They often reflect a breakdown in the basics: consistent skin checks, timely repositioning, appropriate hygiene, and fast escalation when redness appears.
Locally, families frequently describe similar patterns:
- Short staffing and high turnover that makes care routines inconsistent
- Care plan changes after hospital discharge that aren’t fully implemented
- Delays in responding when a caregiver or family member reports concerns
- Documentation gaps that don’t match what wound care providers later say was happening
When a pressure ulcer develops—or worsens—despite a known risk level, that timing matters. Your attorney will focus on what the facility knew, when it knew it, and whether it followed its own prevention and treatment standards.


