In the Hudson Valley and throughout New York, nursing facilities document care in layers—risk assessments, turning schedules, wound checks, nursing notes, and physician orders. When those layers don’t match up, it can create gaps that matter legally.
After a pressure ulcer is discovered, your immediate priority should be medical treatment and updated care planning. Then, quickly shift to evidence preservation:
- Ask for the most recent wound assessment and the care plan addressing skin integrity
- Request skin check and repositioning documentation for the period leading up to the ulcer
- Keep copies of hospital discharge paperwork, medication lists, and any wound photos provided to you
- Write down a simple timeline: when you first noticed redness, when staff responded, and what was said
Even if you’re not sure yet whether you have a legal claim, acting early helps prevent missing records and makes later reviews more accurate.


