Pressure ulcers aren’t random. They usually appear when high-risk skin isn’t protected through a combination of:
- scheduled repositioning
- proper support surfaces (mattresses/overlays)
- timely skin assessments
- hygiene and moisture control
- nutrition and hydration monitoring
- prompt wound care when early redness shows up
In Hanford-area communities, families sometimes struggle with limited availability of specialty wound care and the practical reality of coordinating appointments, transportation, and insurance paperwork—so delays that might be “papered over” internally can have real-world consequences for healing.
A facility may claim the injury was unavoidable due to age or medical conditions. That argument is common. The legal question is whether the facility followed a reasonable prevention plan for that resident’s specific risk level and whether staff responded appropriately when warning signs appeared.


