Many pressure ulcer cases don’t start with an obvious emergency. Instead, the injury becomes noticeable after a period of ordinary routines—shifts in staffing, changes in mobility, or a decline in nutrition/hydration—that can increase skin risk. Families in Vineland commonly describe a similar pattern:
- A resident develops early redness or discomfort during a busy stretch when staffing is tight.
- Updates slow down or become inconsistent.
- The wound appears to worsen between check-ins or after a transfer.
That timing matters. In New Jersey, the strength of a claim often turns on the timeline: when risk was identified, when skin changes were documented, and how quickly appropriate wound care and repositioning should have started.


