In many Doraville-area long-term care settings, family members can only visit on evenings or weekends. That timing matters: early warning signs—like persistent redness, discoloration, warmth, or skin that doesn’t blanch—may look minor until they worsen.
Legally, pressure ulcers matter because they can be a red flag that a facility did not provide the level of prevention and monitoring a resident required. Your claim often turns on whether the staff followed an appropriate care plan for mobility limitations, repositioning needs, skin checks, moisture control, and timely wound care.
Because families may discover the injury later, the case usually depends on records showing:
- what the resident’s risk level was
- how often skin checks were documented
- whether repositioning and hygiene support were actually provided
- when wound treatment began after early changes


