Pressure ulcers typically don’t appear “out of nowhere.” They usually develop when residents are left in the same position too long, when skin checks are inconsistent, or when staff don’t respond quickly enough to early redness or deterioration.
In Jasper, families often tell us the same story: they visited regularly, noticed changes, reported concerns, and were told everything was being monitored—yet the ulcer progressed. That pattern can point to failures like:
- missed or late repositioning for residents with limited mobility
- incomplete skin assessment documentation after changes in condition
- delayed wound care orders or inconsistent dressing changes
- insufficient training or staffing for residents who need frequent assistance
- care plan updates not matching what was actually being done
Even when a facility argues the ulcer was unavoidable due to underlying health, Indiana negligence claims still hinge on whether reasonable care was provided for that resident’s risk level.


