In a community like Thomasville—where many families rely on long-term care facilities for help with mobility, hygiene, and daily monitoring—pressure ulcers are often treated as a “medical inevitability” even when prevention was possible.
Legally, what matters is whether the facility provided care consistent with accepted standards for residents who are at risk. Pressure ulcers can indicate breakdowns in routine safety measures such as:
- timely skin checks and risk reassessments
- turning/repositioning schedules for residents who cannot move independently
- prompt wound care escalation when early redness appears
- coordination between nursing staff and clinicians about treatment changes
When those basics slip, the injury can worsen quickly—sometimes over days rather than weeks.


