Temecula’s many residential neighborhoods and commute-heavy routines can create a pattern families recognize: you visit on weekends or evenings, everything appears stable, and then a new wound shows up after a gap in observation. That doesn’t mean the injury happened only the moment you saw it—but it does explain why timing and documentation become critical.
In pressure ulcer cases, the key question is whether the facility identified risk early and responded with consistent prevention. When families report that staff seemed unhurried about turning schedules or delayed wound evaluation, attorneys often focus on whether the facility’s records reflect what should have happened during the days leading up to the injury.


