One of the most important facts in a pressure ulcer case is timing—not just the date the wound was noticed, but whether the facility documented risk and prevention steps early.
Ask yourself:
- Did your loved one have skin breakdown before admission?
- Were turning/repositioning and skin checks already in place based on mobility limits?
- Did staff respond quickly once redness or “non-blanchable” areas were observed?
In many California cases, the facility’s defense turns on a familiar argument: the ulcer was caused by underlying medical conditions. That’s why families should preserve anything that shows the baseline condition and what changed afterward—your loved one’s initial assessments, wound staging information, and the sequence of care decisions.


