Cottage Grove is a growing suburban community where many residents rely on long-term care and post-hospital rehab. Across Minnesota, facilities manage residents with complex medical needs—diabetes, limited mobility, dementia, stroke recovery, and post-surgery weakness. When staffing, scheduling, or care planning breaks down, pressure injuries can show up in predictable ways.
Families often report patterns like:
- Delays in responding to redness or “skin breakdown” concerns
- Inconsistent turning/repositioning when a resident is bedbound or chair-bound
- Gaps in wound documentation after discharge or transfers
- Unclear communication between certified nursing staff and wound care providers
Even when a facility insists the ulcer “just happens,” the timeline matters. In pressure ulcer cases, Minnesota law focuses on whether the facility provided care that met the standard expected under similar circumstances.


