Many pressure ulcer cases don’t “start” with a dramatic event. Instead, families often notice problems during routine visits—especially when a resident’s day-to-day care involves mobility limitations and frequent in-room routines.
In Torrington and nearby Northwest Connecticut communities, these situations come up often:
- Long stretches with limited turning assistance: Residents who can’t reposition well may rely entirely on staff schedules.
- After hospital discharge: A new wound risk can appear once someone returns home or to a facility after illness, surgery, or decline.
- Inconsistent documentation during staffing pressure: Facilities sometimes fall behind on charting, skin checks, or wound updates—especially when shift coverage is tight.
- Care plan changes that don’t get followed: Even when a facility updates a care plan, the resident’s actual treatment sometimes lags behind.
If any of this sounds familiar, don’t wait for “the next report.” In pressure ulcer cases, timing and documentation are often the difference between a claim that is persuasive and one that becomes harder to prove.


