In Illinois, nursing homes must follow accepted standards of care and maintain documentation showing residents are assessed, repositioned, and treated appropriately. When a pressure ulcer appears after admission—or worsens despite risk factors—families in the Quad Cities area understandably wonder whether the facility missed its obligations.
In a real-world Moline setting, disputes often come down to whether the facility:
- recognized skin breakdown risk in a timely way,
- carried out turning/repositioning schedules,
- monitored moisture, hygiene, and friction/shear,
- escalated care when early redness or skin changes appeared, and
- updated the care plan when conditions changed.
Those are factual questions, and the answers usually live in the records.


