In many Newport cases, the dispute isn’t about whether a pressure ulcer happened—it’s about when it was first recognized and whether the facility responded quickly enough.
Because long-term care is a regulated, documented environment, delays can be hidden behind paperwork. Families may notice changes during visits—like redness that seemed to worsen over a short period—only to learn later that skin checks, repositioning records, or wound care updates weren’t timely or weren’t consistent.
A local attorney can help you build a timeline that aligns:
- the resident’s condition at admission,
- the first signs of pressure injury,
- the facility’s documented risk assessments,
- and the wound care steps taken once the ulcer appeared.


