In many pressure ulcer cases, the most important question isn’t just whether a sore appeared—it’s when it appeared and how the facility responded after risk was identified.
In Bloomington (and across Minnesota), nursing facilities maintain extensive clinical documentation, but those records can be incomplete, inconsistent, or difficult to interpret without experience. A common pattern we see in real cases:
- A resident is admitted with no ulcer (or with a resolved wound)
- Risk factors are present (limited mobility, sensory impairment, incontinence, diabetes, poor nutrition)
- Skin changes show up later, often after days or weeks
- Family concerns are raised, but wound care escalation doesn’t match what a reasonable facility would do
Your attorney’s job is to build a timeline that connects the dots between risk assessment, turning/repositioning practices, skin checks, and wound treatment decisions.


