New Hampshire residents rely on local nursing facilities and rehab centers for consistent daily care—turning schedules, skin checks, hygiene assistance, and wound monitoring. Pressure ulcers develop when those routines break down or when a care plan isn’t followed closely enough.
In practice, families in Keene commonly report concerns such as:
- Gaps noticed between visits (a wound that seems to worsen quickly)
- Inconsistent explanations about when staff first saw redness
- Care plan changes that don’t seem to match what residents experience day-to-day
- Delays in wound escalation, like when a minor area should have triggered prompt reassessment
New Hampshire law generally treats these cases as negligence-type claims: the key question is whether the facility provided reasonable care under the circumstances and whether that failure caused the pressure ulcer injury.


