Many Alexandria families juggle work, school, and travel time—especially when visiting during evenings or weekends. That can make early warning signs easier to miss, such as:
- light redness that doesn’t fade
- new warmth or tenderness over bony areas
- worsening mobility or increased time in one position
- inconsistent documentation of skin checks
Pressure ulcers don’t appear overnight. They often develop over days when a resident is at risk due to immobility, sensory impairment, illness, or cognitive decline. When families first notice the problem, it’s frequently after the injury has progressed—at which point the facility may argue it was unavoidable.
A lawyer’s job is to focus on the question insurers and defense teams usually raise: what did the facility know, when did it know it, and what prevention steps were actually carried out?


