Clawson is a suburban community where many families rely on a mix of weekday caregivers, weekend visits, and phone updates from the facility. That routine can unintentionally delay recognition of early warning signs—especially when residents:
- spend long stretches in the same chair or bed due to mobility limits
- have impaired sensation (so pain/redness isn’t reported)
- need assistance with toileting and hygiene more often than staff can reliably document
- require consistent repositioning and skin checks during shift changes
When prevention fails, pressure ulcers don’t develop overnight. They often start with early redness or skin breakdown that should trigger immediate repositioning, wound evaluation, and care-plan adjustments.
A strong claim doesn’t rely on outrage—it relies on what the facility recorded, what it should have done under standard care, and what happened after the warning signs appeared.


