In Oakdale, many families juggle work schedules, school pickups, and long drives to check on a loved one. That reality can make early warning signs easy to miss—especially when staff updates don’t feel detailed or consistent.
Pressure ulcers often develop when a facility doesn’t follow a resident’s prevention plan, including:
- turning/repositioning schedules
- skin checks at the right frequency
- prompt wound care when redness or breakdown begins
- adequate nutrition/hydration support
- documentation that matches the resident’s actual condition
When a facility’s records and the resident’s timeline don’t line up, it may indicate a failure in care. In California, that can support a negligence-based claim—meaning the question becomes whether the facility met the standard of reasonable care under similar circumstances.


