Many pressure ulcer cases don’t start with dramatic symptoms. A resident may look stable during one visit, then families notice redness, discoloration, or “a sore” later—sometimes after missed or delayed attention to skin checks and turning schedules.
In day-to-day life around Rahway—where many families balance work commutes and school schedules—there’s often less time to monitor every shift. That can make it easier for risk to go unnoticed for longer than it should. Legally, the key question becomes whether the facility’s care matched what a reasonably careful nursing staff would do for that resident’s mobility, sensation, nutrition, and medical history.


