Pressure ulcers don’t appear out of nowhere. They typically develop when a resident’s risk factors aren’t managed consistently—especially for people who:
- need help turning and repositioning
- have limited mobility after surgery or illness
- experience reduced sensation or confusion that makes self-reporting difficult
- require assistance with hygiene and skin checks
- have nutritional issues that slow healing
In many Babylon-area cases, families describe a familiar pattern: the resident seems “fine” during routine visits, then a caregiver later reports redness, a wound, or an infection. Defense narratives often shift quickly to “inevitable complications,” especially when the facility’s paperwork is incomplete or vague.
A strong legal approach starts by comparing what the records say should have happened to what appears to have happened in practice.


