Many pressure ulcer cases begin around transitions—especially when a resident comes back to a skilled nursing facility after an illness, surgery, or fall. In the Bay Area, families juggle work commutes, school schedules, and medical appointments. That makes it easier to miss early warning signs.
Common scenarios we see in the Pinole area include:
- Care needs increase quickly after hospitalization, but the facility’s staffing and follow-through don’t.
- A resident is less mobile or has reduced sensation, requiring consistent repositioning.
- The facility documents assessments and wound care, but the timing doesn’t match the injury’s progression.
- Family concerns are raised, yet the response is delayed or not reflected clearly in the record.
When a pressure ulcer develops—or worsens—after a discharge, the timeline matters. Your attorney will focus on whether the facility responded with the level of prevention and monitoring a reasonably careful provider would have used.


