Pressure ulcers don’t appear out of nowhere. They usually develop when a facility fails to manage risk factors—like immobility, reduced sensation, or medical conditions that require frequent repositioning and close monitoring.
In Western MA, many residents transition between hospitals and skilled nursing facilities during busy seasons and after storms, surgeries, or long rehabilitation stays. Those transitions matter because documentation and care handoffs must stay consistent.
Common warning patterns families in Easthampton report include:
- Gaps in turning/repositioning after staff say it was “done”
- Delayed response to early redness or skin changes
- Inconsistent wound care updates or unclear treatment plans
- Insufficient assistance with hygiene or toileting needs
- Nutrition/hydration concerns that weren’t addressed quickly enough
A bedsore can worsen fast. The timeline is often the difference between a claim that’s clear and one that becomes disputed.


