Romeoville is a suburban community where many families juggle work commutes, school schedules, and frequent travel to long-term care facilities. When a resident’s condition changes, it can be hard to monitor daily details—like whether staff repositioned your loved one on time.
That’s exactly why pressure ulcer cases often hinge on minute-by-minute care practices and documentation:
- Missed or late turning/repositioning during long shifts
- Inconsistent assistance with toileting and hygiene
- Delayed wound staging and treatment escalation
- Care plans that don’t match what actually happened
- Risk assessments that look completed “on paper,” but not in practice
When families live an hour away or visit around work schedules, they may notice redness after it has already progressed. The legal question becomes whether the facility recognized risk early and responded appropriately.


