Pressure ulcers aren’t just an unfortunate medical outcome. They can be a sign that a facility’s daily care system isn’t working—especially when residents require regular turning, skin checks, moisture control, and timely wound treatment.
In Newark-area cases, families often report similar patterns:
- A resident’s risk level was known (limited mobility, incontinence, poor nutrition), but skin monitoring didn’t happen consistently.
- Repositioning and hygiene were delayed or not documented clearly.
- Wound care orders existed, but follow-through was uneven.
- Care plan updates lagged behind the resident’s changing condition after hospitalization.
Delaware law requires care that meets professional standards. When pressure ulcers appear or worsen without reasonable prevention and response, that gap can support a claim.


