Pressure ulcers don’t develop overnight for no reason. They typically result from breakdowns in day-to-day care—things like turning and repositioning, skin monitoring, moisture control, wound response, and nutrition/hydration support.
In real-life Waterville situations, families often report patterns such as:
- Short-staffed shifts leading to delayed assistance with mobility or toileting
- Inconsistent “turning” schedules—especially for residents who can’t change position independently
- Skin checks that happen too late or aren’t matched with what wound notes later describe
- Difficulty getting answers about who saw the problem first and when
- Care plan updates that lag behind the resident’s actual condition
When a pressure injury progresses, it can create medical complications—pain, infection risk, hospital transfers, and longer recovery. The legal question is whether the facility responded with reasonable care once risk was known.


