Pressure ulcers don’t usually appear “out of nowhere.” In many Northglenn cases, families report patterns like:
- Skin redness noticed after missed turning/position changes during long stretches between checks
- Wound care that seems delayed after a caregiver or nurse flags early symptoms
- Inconsistent documentation in daily notes or care records
- Higher risk residents (limited mobility, sensory impairment, recent hospitalization) who don’t receive the level of monitoring described in their care plan
- Nutrition and hydration concerns that weren’t addressed promptly when weight loss or dehydration occurred
Because Colorado long-term care facilities must follow care standards designed to prevent avoidable harm, the key is whether the facility responded appropriately once risk was known and symptoms appeared.


