Pressure ulcers can worsen quickly—especially for residents who are older, have limited mobility, or require help with toileting, bathing, or repositioning. In many facilities across central Indiana, families discover an injury after it has progressed beyond early redness.
Legally, the key question is whether the facility met the standard of care for preventing and responding to skin breakdown. That often turns on what the staff documented, when they documented it, and whether the care plan was followed in practice.
Because records are time-sensitive, the sooner you start organizing and requesting documents, the better. Indiana cases can hinge on timing—what was known at admission, what risk factors were identified, and how quickly the wound care response began.


