Carteret has a dense, commuter-heavy rhythm. Many residents’ families check in after shifts, during evening hours, or on weekends—when staff changes and documentation can look different from morning rounds. That timing gap matters in pressure ulcer cases because the legal question is not only whether an ulcer developed, but when risk was recognized and how fast the facility responded.
In many cases, the records show a delay between:
- a resident’s mobility decline or skin-risk identification,
- the first documented skin change, and
- the start of appropriate wound care.
Your attorney will look for those breaks in the chain of care—especially where the facility’s written protocols exist, but the implementation appears inconsistent.


