In Michigan skilled nursing facilities, pressure ulcers generally point to one or more breakdowns in basic care—things families expect to see documented and consistently followed. Depending on the resident’s mobility, common risk-related issues include:
- Inconsistent turning and repositioning (especially for residents who can’t shift weight independently)
- Delayed response to early skin changes (redness, warmth, or discoloration that wasn’t treated as a warning sign)
- Care plan gaps—when the written plan doesn’t match what actually happened during day-to-day staffing
- Hygiene and moisture management problems, which can contribute to skin breakdown
- Nutrition and hydration concerns that make healing slower and complications more likely
Families in Roseville sometimes tell us they raised concerns multiple times—only to learn later that skin assessments or wound updates were missing, late, or incomplete. That mismatch can be legally significant.


