Families in and around College Park frequently describe the same pattern—everything seemed fine, then a new wound shows up after a period of increased activity, a change in staffing, or after the resident returns from a hospital stay.
Pressure ulcers often form when basic prevention isn’t consistently followed, such as:
- turning/repositioning schedules not being maintained
- missed skin checks or delayed reporting of early redness
- insufficient assistance with transfers, toileting, or hygiene
- care plan steps not matching what actually happens day-to-day
- wound care decisions delayed while waiting for “progress”
Even when a facility insists the injury was unavoidable, the timing matters. If the resident had no pressure injury at intake and later develops one, that timeline can become central to your claim.


