Many pressure ulcer cases in the area start with a familiar pattern: a resident is discharged to a facility after illness, surgery, or a fall, then weeks later caregivers notice redness, open wounds, or worsening sores. When that happens, families often ask two immediate questions:
- Was the facility prepared to manage the resident’s risk?
- Did the facility respond fast enough once skin changes appeared?
In real-world settings, delays can happen when:
- risk assessments are not updated after a discharge,
- turning/repositioning schedules aren’t followed consistently,
- wound care orders aren’t implemented promptly,
- documentation doesn’t match what families observed.
A lawyer’s job is to translate what you experienced into a clear, evidence-based timeline that shows whether reasonable care was provided.


