Pressure ulcers aren’t random. They typically develop when a facility doesn’t consistently manage the basics of prevention—especially for residents who:
- spend long hours in bed or in a wheelchair
- have limited mobility after surgery, strokes, or falls
- have impaired sensation (they may not feel pain or discomfort)
- struggle with nutrition, hydration, or other health conditions that affect healing
In many Roscoe-area cases, the story follows a pattern: a resident arrives with risk factors, the facility creates a care plan, and then prevention doesn’t happen at the frequency required by that plan. Sometimes the gap shows up as delayed repositioning. Other times it’s inconsistent skin checks, late wound recognition, or documentation that doesn’t match what family members observed.


