Beverly Hills residents often rely on well-coordinated care plans—sometimes involving multiple clinicians, follow-up appointments, and frequent family visits. That can make it feel like “someone must have noticed” if skin breakdown started.
But pressure ulcers can develop quickly when:
- turning and repositioning schedules aren’t followed consistently
- skin checks aren’t performed at the right intervals
- wound care isn’t escalated when early redness appears
- nutrition, hydration, or mobility support falls short of the care plan
Even when family members are present, documentation controls what insurers and courts can rely on. The most important question becomes: what did the facility record, when did they record it, and do those records match the resident’s actual condition over time?


