Pressure ulcers aren’t random. They usually develop when a resident spends too long in one position, when skin checks aren’t performed consistently, or when changes in mobility, sensation, nutrition, and hygiene aren’t met with an updated care plan.
In real Danbury nursing home settings, families often report patterns like:
- Turning/repositioning that didn’t happen as scheduled
- Delays between first signs (redness, warmth, discoloration) and actual wound care
- Gaps between care-plan instructions and what staff documented
- Missed escalation when a resident’s condition changed
When those failures occur, the issue often isn’t just the injury itself—it’s whether the facility responded reasonably once risk was known.


