In and around Vicksburg, families frequently tell us the same story: the resident was “fine” at admission, but concerns started after changes in mobility, staffing patterns, or routine. Pressure ulcers can be linked to failures in areas like turning/repositioning, moisture control, skin checks, and wound care escalation.
Even when a facility has policies, real-world breakdowns can happen—especially when a resident needs more hands-on assistance than the staff schedule anticipates. When documentation doesn’t match the resident’s observed condition, that mismatch is often where attorneys focus first.


