In a nursing home, pressure ulcers are not just a “skin problem.” They can reflect failures in basic care routines—especially for residents who spend long stretches in beds or wheelchairs.
In Covington-area cases, patterns we often see include:
- Admissions and care-plan gaps after transfers from St. Elizabeth area hospitals or other facilities
- Inconsistent turning and skin checks during staffing shortfalls (common during holidays and peak demand periods)
- Delayed escalation when early redness is reported by family or aides
- Documentation breakdowns—the record says one thing, but wound progression suggests something else
Kentucky law focuses on whether the facility provided care consistent with professional standards and whether deviations caused harm. That means your case usually turns on the timeline and the facility’s response once risk was recognized.


