Pressure ulcers don’t usually appear out of nowhere. They typically develop when someone stays in the same position too long, when skin checks are inconsistent, or when early redness is not addressed.
In many La Mirada cases, families report patterns that raise red flags:
- Inconsistent turning/repositioning during long stretches between staff rounds
- Delayed response after a caregiver or family member reports redness, warmth, or swelling
- Care plan drift, where the written plan exists but the day-to-day routine doesn’t match it
- Gaps after hospital discharge, when new risks aren’t fully reflected in the facility’s wound-prevention approach
California nursing home residents are entitled to care that meets accepted standards. When documentation and actual care don’t line up, that discrepancy can become central to liability.


