Fort Wayne-area families often notice pressure ulcer concerns after a hospitalization, a routine check, or a sudden change in condition. In many cases, the timeline matters: a resident may arrive with intact skin and later develop redness, open wounds, or infection.
Legally, the question is whether the nursing home provided reasonable care consistent with accepted standards—especially for residents who are bedridden, have limited mobility, or cannot reliably report discomfort.
Pressure ulcers can also signal system problems inside the facility, such as:
- insufficient staffing on certain shifts
- incomplete or inconsistent documentation of skin assessments
- care plans that don’t match what actually happened day-to-day
- delayed escalation when early symptoms appeared


