In Corcoran-area long-term care settings, pressure ulcers often show up after a resident has been:
- left in the same position too long (bedbound or chairbound)
- struggling with mobility, transfers, or limited sensation
- experiencing delayed response to redness or early skin changes
- receiving inconsistent hygiene or wound monitoring
A bedsore is frequently a sign that care coordination, staffing, and monitoring didn’t meet the standard required for the resident’s risk level. The legal question is whether the facility responded as a reasonably careful nursing home would have—given what they knew about the resident’s condition.


