Pressure ulcers usually don’t appear out of nowhere. They often develop when residents who are immobile or partially mobile aren’t consistently repositioned and monitored—especially when skin risk increases due to illness, dehydration, poor nutrition, or reduced sensation.
In many Gilroy-area family situations, care concerns start during busy stretches: a resident is recovering from a procedure, family members are coordinating transportation to appointments, or the facility is running lean staffing. When family visits are less frequent, early skin changes can go unnoticed longer than they should.
A pressure ulcer can therefore become a legal issue when it suggests the facility failed to:
- follow an appropriate turning/repositioning schedule
- document risk assessments and skin checks
- respond promptly to early redness or “non-blanchable” skin findings
- coordinate wound care with the resident’s changing medical needs


