Pressure ulcers don’t usually appear out of nowhere. They often develop when residents—especially those with limited mobility—aren’t repositioned on time, don’t receive consistent skin checks, or don’t get prompt wound care when early warning signs show up.
In a community like Fishers, families commonly tell us they noticed issues during busy stretches of the week—after weekend staffing changes, following transitions from hospitals, or when a resident required more hands-on help than the schedule reflected. Those patterns matter because pressure ulcer prevention depends on reliable day-to-day execution, not just written policies.
When a facility’s care plan doesn’t match what residents actually experienced, that mismatch can support a claim for negligence.


