Rochester is a mix of long-term residents, families who work full shifts, and frequent caregiver turnover—plus many facilities rely on rotating staff schedules and coverage gaps during busy periods. In practice, those realities can show up in the record as:
- missed or late skin checks
- inconsistent repositioning documentation
- delays in notifying clinicians after early redness
- incomplete wound care notes or missing risk updates
Pressure ulcers aren’t just a medical issue—they can also be a sign that the facility didn’t follow the care plan and monitoring steps that a reasonably careful provider would use. The legal question in Rochester cases usually comes down to whether the facility’s system for prevention and response worked when risk was present.


