Pressure ulcers typically develop when a resident stays in one position too long or when risk factors aren’t addressed promptly. In smaller communities like Wabash, families may have fewer opportunities to compare experiences across facilities—so warning signs can be missed or dismissed until the injury is clearly documented.
Common local scenarios we see in Indiana nursing home cases include:
- Residents who require frequent turning but spend long stretches without documented repositioning.
- Limited mobility after surgery or illness, where staff must follow a specific care plan to reduce pressure and shear.
- Skin checks that appear inconsistent in the record, especially around busy shifts or staffing shortages.
- Wound care that lags behind the injury stage, allowing a minor redness to worsen.
Even when staff members care deeply, negligence can exist when systems fail—such as staffing levels, training, documentation practices, or failure to escalate after early signs appear.


