In our area, many families notice skin injuries shortly after a loved one returns from a medical stay. Hospitals may stabilize a condition, then discharge the resident to long-term care with updated risk factors—reduced mobility, medication changes, appetite concerns, or wound history.
When prevention depends on consistent repositioning, skin checks, and timely wound care, a delay can turn a preventable issue into a serious injury. If the pressure ulcer appeared soon after admission or after a documented change in condition, that timing can be a key part of your case.
A Kansas-focused legal review will typically look for things like:
- Whether the facility updated the care plan after the resident’s risk changed
- Whether staff performed and recorded skin assessments as required by the plan
- Whether wound treatment started promptly once warning signs appeared


