San Bruno is a commuter community with a steady flow of visitors, workers, and multi-step healthcare transitions—hospital to skilled nursing, rehab to long-term care, and sometimes transfers between facilities. In that environment, documentation gaps can be especially damaging.
When a resident develops a pressure ulcer after admission, the timeline matters: what the facility knew at the start, what risk factors were identified, and whether the resident’s care plan was followed during day-to-day shifts. Even minor lapses—missed skin checks, delays in wound escalation, or inconsistent turning schedules—can compound, particularly for residents with limited mobility or sensory impairment.
California requires nursing facilities to meet accepted standards of care. When those standards aren’t met, families may have grounds to seek compensation for medical treatment, additional care needs, and harm caused by preventable injury.


