Pressure ulcers are sometimes treated like inevitable setbacks, but many cases hinge on a narrow window of time—when risk should have been recognized and when skin changes should have triggered updated care.
In the La Plata area, many families are juggling work schedules, school runs, and travel to visit residents. That’s normal. But it can also mean warning signs are first noticed by non-family staff or during shifts you can’t easily observe. When that happens, the case often becomes a records-and-timing dispute:
- When the resident’s risk level was assessed (and whether it was updated)
- Whether repositioning and skin checks were documented consistently
- How quickly wound care escalated after redness or deterioration appeared
Your attorney’s job is to rebuild that timeline using wound notes, care plan updates, turning/repositioning logs, and incident reporting.


