In many nursing home cases, the hardest part isn’t the injury—it’s proving what happened day-to-day. Facilities generate documentation, but the story is often scattered across progress notes, wound sheets, turning logs, and risk assessments.
In East Lansing, where families may commute from surrounding communities and juggle school schedules, work, and medical appointments, it’s common for concerns to start small: a new area of redness, a “we’ll check on it” response, or inconsistent updates. If those early warning signs weren’t acted on promptly, a pressure ulcer can progress quickly—leading to deeper tissue damage, infection risk, and longer recovery.
A lawyer’s job is to connect the dots between:
- what staff observed (or failed to observe)
- what the care plan required
- whether prevention steps were actually carried out
- when wound treatment began compared to when the risk should have been addressed


