In smaller communities across Central Illinois, families may visit at set times—after work, weekends, or during breaks from commuting. That can make it easier for early warning signs (like redness or persistent soreness over a bony area) to go unnoticed until they worsen.
At the same time, long-term care facilities must manage residents with complex medical needs—mobility limits, diabetes, circulation problems, cognitive impairment, and medication side effects that affect sensation and healing. The legal question is whether the facility responded with the level of prevention and follow-up a reasonable provider would use for that risk.
A lawyer’s job is to connect the timeline: when the resident was at risk, when staff documented skin checks, and when wound care escalated.


