A pressure ulcer can develop when skin and soft tissue are subjected to prolonged pressure, friction, or shearing. But legally, the important issue is often what the facility did once the risk was known—and whether reasonable prevention and timely wound response were provided.
In practice, families in Danville may notice patterns such as:
- Turning/repositioning not happening consistently during long stretches
- Delays in responding to early redness or skin changes
- Missed or incomplete skin checks in the resident’s chart
- Lack of follow-through after care plan updates
- Communication gaps between nursing staff and wound care providers
The sooner you organize what you’ve observed and what the facility documented, the stronger your ability to evaluate what happened.


