In many cases, a pressure ulcer is the visible result of underlying failures in daily care routines—things like:
- turning and repositioning not happening on the required schedule
- missed skin checks or late recognition of early redness
- hygiene and moisture control not being followed consistently
- inadequate follow-through on wound care orders
Even when a resident has health conditions that increase risk, Minnesota facilities still have obligations to assess, monitor, and respond. A pressure ulcer can become a legal issue when the facility’s processes don’t match what a reasonably careful care provider would do.


