New York’s long-term care environment can be demanding. Facilities operate with real staffing constraints, high patient turnover, and complex care needs—especially during periods when residents require more hands-on assistance. When prevention steps break down, pressure ulcers can develop quickly.
For families, the hardest part is that the earliest signs may look minor: redness, warmth, or discomfort in an area that a resident can’t easily reposition themselves. By the time you see the full injury, the facility may treat it as an unfortunate progression rather than a preventable failure.
A strong legal claim typically turns on one question: Did the facility respond with the level of care that a reasonable nursing home should provide once risk was known?


