In and around Trenton, families often notice problems during routine transitions—after hospitalization, after a medication change, or when a resident becomes weaker or more immobile. Pressure ulcers can develop quickly when:
- Mobility assistance isn’t matched to the resident’s current needs (for example, after discharge from Capital Health–area hospitals or other medical facilities).
- Skin checks and wound staging aren’t documented consistently between shifts.
- Repositioning schedules aren’t followed (and the record doesn’t reflect the “turning” that should have occurred).
- Nutrition and hydration support lag behind clinical risk, especially for residents with poor intake.
- Family concerns are met with delay, such as “we’ll monitor” instead of timely wound evaluation.
Even when a facility claims the ulcer was “unavoidable,” the timeline matters. If risk factors were known and the injury appears after care duties should have prevented it, that’s where a legal review becomes critical.


