Suburban routines can make it easy to assume a facility is “handling it” between visits—until you see changes that weren’t there before. In North Plainfield, many families balance work commutes and school schedules, meaning the first warning is often a call from the facility or a sudden photo report of redness or open skin.
That delay is exactly why pressure ulcer cases can hinge on timing:
- Was the resident at risk on admission?
- When did the first skin change show up?
- How quickly did staff escalate to wound care and update the care plan?
An attorney’s job is to translate dates in records into a clear timeline—so you’re not left guessing whether the injury was preventable.


