Pressure ulcers (often called bedsores) are not just a cosmetic problem. They usually signal that a resident’s care plan wasn’t fully carried out—especially for people who are:
- mostly bedbound or wheelchair-dependent
- unable to reposition themselves
- at higher risk due to illness, limited mobility, or reduced sensation
In Roswell and the broader metro area, families commonly report similar patterns: visit notes that don’t match what wound care teams later say, changes noticed around the time of staffing shifts, and delays between a family concern and the wound being properly assessed.
A facility may promise improvement, but a legal claim focuses on whether the standard of care was met in real time—including timely skin checks, repositioning, hygiene, and appropriate escalation when wounds begin.


