Lone Tree is largely suburban and residential, and many families initially assume long-term care will feel structured and predictable. But pressure ulcer prevention is the opposite of “set it and forget it.” It depends on continuous bedside routines—turning schedules, hygiene support, skin monitoring, and timely escalation when a wound doesn’t improve.
When those routines slip, families often report patterns like:
- Staff assistance arriving later than expected (especially during shift changes)
- Turning/repositioning not matching the resident’s care plan
- Skin assessments documented inconsistently with what families observe
- Wound care described as “in progress,” but treatment timelines don’t move forward
These are the kinds of gaps a lawyer will look for when assessing whether care fell below what Colorado residents should reasonably receive.


