A pressure ulcer can develop when a resident’s care plan isn’t carried out consistently—especially in settings where residents require frequent repositioning, skin checks, and prompt wound treatment. In real life, those needs can be affected by:
- staffing shortages or high turnover
- gaps between shift handoffs and documented skin observations
- delayed response after family members raise concerns
- inconsistent wound care follow-through
In New Jersey, nursing home injury claims generally turn on whether the facility provided reasonable care under the circumstances and whether failures contributed to the injury. Your attorney’s job is to connect the timeline of care to the timeline of the wound.


