Covina families often tell the same story: they trusted the facility’s routines—turning schedules, skin checks, hygiene assistance—until they saw a worsening wound or heard vague explanations. Pressure ulcers can develop when risk assessments aren’t updated, repositioning isn’t consistent, or wound care is delayed.
In practice, these injuries may show up after a change in condition (infection, hospitalization, mobility decline) or after staffing strain. Courts and insurers typically focus on whether the facility responded like a reasonably careful provider would have under similar circumstances.


