In many Fountain-area communities, families juggle work schedules, school pickups, and long commutes—so visits can be less frequent than residents need. When family presence is intermittent, the facility’s internal systems become even more critical: risk screening, skin checks, turning/repositioning, wound assessment, and timely escalation when redness or breakdown appears.
Pressure ulcers generally develop when a resident:
- stays in one position too long (pressure and shearing)
- has limited mobility or impaired sensation
- experiences delayed response to early skin changes
- doesn’t receive consistent wound prevention and care as required by their plan
In a legal claim, the focus is not on the injury alone—it’s on whether the facility provided the level of prevention and monitoring that a reasonable care provider would deliver under similar circumstances.


