Pressure ulcers aren’t usually an accident. They often develop when a care plan fails to match the resident’s risk level—especially for people with limited mobility, difficulty repositioning, or reduced skin sensation.
In practice, families in El Dorado commonly notice patterns like:
- delayed responses after staff are told about redness or skin changes
- missed turning/repositioning assistance during long shifts
- wound care that lags behind what the condition appears to require
- documentation that doesn’t line up with what families saw or were told
Kansas cases often turn on whether the facility acted reasonably under the circumstances. That requires more than sympathy—it requires records, timelines, and a clear link between the care provided and the injury that occurred.


