In many Banning-area situations, families notice changes during routine visits—sometimes after a weekend, a holiday, or a period when staffing is stretched. Pressure ulcers are often not “one day” injuries. They are typically the result of repeated failures to prevent sustained pressure, friction, and shearing forces.
When prevention breaks down, a resident may experience:
- Persistent redness that wasn’t documented as a progressing wound
- Delayed wound care orders or inconsistent dressing changes
- Missed or poorly followed turning/repositioning schedules
- Lack of follow-through on care plan updates
California facilities are required to provide appropriate care and to maintain documentation of assessments and interventions. When the record doesn’t match the resident’s condition over time, that gap can become a key part of a negligence claim.


