Pressure ulcers don’t appear out of nowhere. They typically develop when a resident’s risk level and care plan aren’t matched by daily practice—especially around high-demand periods when facilities are stretched.
Common Champaign-area scenarios we see in cases include:
- Residents returning from hospital stays with new mobility limits, where risk reassessments and repositioning schedules weren’t updated quickly enough.
- Residents who spend long hours in chairs (not just beds), where pressure relief requires consistent staff help and equipment use.
- Short-staffed shifts leading to delayed checks, missed turning windows, or incomplete wound documentation.
- Communication gaps between nursing staff and wound care providers, where early redness or drainage wasn’t escalated.
Even when a facility claims the ulcer was “inevitable” due to age or illness, the key question becomes whether the care delivered met the standard expected for that resident’s condition.


