In many nursing home cases, the dispute isn’t whether the resident suffered an injury—it’s when it developed and what the facility did in the days leading up to it. For Sleepy Hollow families, that often means juggling multiple calendars (doctor visits, rehab follow-ups, and caregiving from different households).
What matters legally is whether the facility recognized the resident’s risk and responded as a reasonably careful care provider would. Pressure ulcers frequently arise when:
- risk assessments weren’t updated after changes in mobility or cognition
- repositioning/turn schedules weren’t followed (or weren’t documented)
- skin checks were missed or delayed
- wound care escalations didn’t happen when early redness or breakdown appeared
- hygiene/toileting assistance wasn’t provided in a timely, consistent way
A strong claim depends on building a clear timeline—before records get lost, overwritten, or become harder to interpret.


