Many cases turn less on what the family believes and more on what the facility documented—especially in the days leading up to discovery. In a smaller community like Corning, families often notice issues quickly (missed turning, delayed hygiene, inconsistent responses to calls), then later learn that the medical record may not line up with what happened in real time.
If the facility’s charting doesn’t match the timeline—such as gaps in skin checks, unclear risk assessments, or wound progression recorded without corresponding repositioning or wound care notes—those inconsistencies can matter.
A Corning nursing home bedsores lawyer can help you build a timeline that ties together:
- admission condition and baseline risk
- turning/repositioning documentation (or lack of it)
- skin assessments and wound measurements
- communication logs and incident reporting
- physician and wound-care follow-ups


