Families in the Twin Cities metro—including Shakopee—often notice issues when a resident’s condition changes faster than expected or when responses to concerns feel delayed. While every case is different, pressure ulcer neglect frequently shows up as:
- Missed or late turning/positioning (especially for residents in beds for most of the day)
- Skin assessments that don’t match the resident’s risk level (or that appear infrequent)
- Wound care that starts late after redness becomes visible
- Gaps between what family reports and what progress notes reflect
- Declining mobility or nutrition not addressed quickly in the care plan
In many situations, families first realize something is wrong during routine visits: a new area of redness, an odor, visible breakdown, or a sudden change in comfort level. Those observations can become important later when your attorney builds the timeline.


