Laurel has a mix of long-term care facilities serving residents from the surrounding area, and many families are juggling work schedules, school pick-ups, and travel from outside the city. That reality can delay notice and make it harder to catch warning signs early.
Pressure ulcers often progress quietly at first—redness that doesn’t fade, skin breakdown over the tailbone/hips/heels, or a sudden change after a hospital stay. When visitors come at different times or only notice during a shift change, the timeline can become confusing. Defense teams may later argue the injury was unavoidable or that it developed after a resident returned from the hospital.
That’s why Laurel-area cases benefit from quick documentation and a tight timeline—before gaps in records become the facility’s best defense.


