In many Flint-area facilities, residents may be visited at predictable times—morning, evening, weekends—while the hardest-to-see care happens in between. Pressure ulcers can form when residents:
- spend long stretches in the same position (bed or chair)
- have reduced sensation or mobility
- need help with toileting and hygiene but don’t consistently receive it
- experience changes in appetite, hydration, or weight
- have care plans that aren’t followed consistently
When you’re dealing with winter weather, transportation delays, or long gaps between visits, it can feel like something “changed overnight.” Legally, that’s exactly why records and timelines matter: the question is whether the facility responded appropriately to risk and early warning signs—not whether the issue is noticed immediately.


