Many pressure ulcer cases in Riverside County involve a familiar pattern: a resident is discharged, care needs increase, and the facility becomes responsible for consistent repositioning, skin checks, hygiene support, and wound escalation.
If your loved one arrived with intact skin—or with only minor redness—but later developed a stageable pressure ulcer, investigators look closely at:
- What risk factors were documented (mobility limits, incontinence, reduced sensation, nutrition concerns)
- Whether the facility adjusted the care plan after changes in condition
- How quickly the facility reacted once skin changes were observed
Even if staffing was not “obviously” inadequate, California claims often turn on whether the facility met the standard of reasonable care for the resident’s needs.


