Pressure ulcers don’t appear out of nowhere. In many cases, they develop after a resident spends too long in one position without adequate turning, offloading, skin monitoring, or prompt escalation when redness appears.
In Wildomar-area facilities, families sometimes describe a pattern that raises legal questions:
- A resident was more dependent than staff reported (limited mobility, difficulty repositioning, sensory impairment)
- Skin checks weren’t consistent or were delayed
- Wound care updates didn’t match the resident’s actual condition
- Documentation exists, but it’s unclear whether required steps happened on schedule
Even when a facility insists the ulcer was “inevitable” due to underlying health, California nursing home neglect cases often turn on whether reasonable prevention and timely response were followed.


