Pressure ulcers aren’t usually random. They often develop when a facility fails to keep up with prevention and early treatment—especially for residents who are:
- mostly bedbound or chairbound
- unable to reposition without assistance
- dealing with diabetes, poor circulation, dehydration, or cognitive impairment
- on medications that affect sensation or mobility
In practice, Murray families may see warning signs during visits: redness that looks “worse than last time,” a resident complaining of discomfort that wasn’t recorded, or wound dressings that seem delayed or inconsistently documented. Those observations can be important, but they’re strongest when paired with facility records showing whether risk was identified and care was followed.


