In Cumberland’s residential neighborhoods and surrounding areas, many families rely on routine visitation and familiar caregivers to stay engaged in a loved one’s day-to-day care. That pattern matters because pressure ulcers can develop quietly when:
- repositioning and skin checks aren’t performed as scheduled,
- residents aren’t moved off high-pressure areas during extended sitting or bedrest,
- wound care updates are delayed after early redness appears,
- nutrition and hydration monitoring doesn’t match the resident’s risk profile.
Maryland facilities are expected to implement individualized care based on assessments and ongoing monitoring. When families see “we were told it was improving” followed by rapid deterioration, that discrepancy often becomes central to a claim.


