A pressure ulcer isn’t simply irritation. It can reflect breakdowns in day-to-day care—things like turning schedules, skin checks, toileting assistance, humidity/wetting management, and coordination between nursing staff and wound-care clinicians.
In practice, families in the Champlin area often describe a similar pattern:
- They noticed redness or discoloration during a visit
- The facility response felt slow or unclear
- Follow-up documentation didn’t match what they were told verbally
Minnesota law recognizes that nursing facilities must meet standards of care. When a wound could reasonably have been prevented or treated earlier, the injury may support a claim for negligence.


