Pressure ulcers don’t appear overnight in most cases. They develop after prolonged pressure, friction, or shearing—usually on the heels, tailbone/sacrum, hips, or other bony areas.
In Roswell, families sometimes encounter patterns like:
- Short or irregular visitation due to work schedules, school activities, or travel time
- Changes in caregivers that lead to inconsistent documentation or follow-through
- Communication gaps between facility staff and family members—especially when families call and are told “the team is monitoring” but no clear wound updates are provided
- Discharge/transfer transitions (hospital to nursing facility) where risk assessments may not be fully carried forward
When early redness or skin breakdown is treated as “routine,” it can become something much more severe. A legal review focuses on whether the facility recognized risk and responded quickly enough.


