In Burlington and the surrounding Alamance County area, many families coordinate care while juggling work, school schedules, and travel between home and facilities. That makes it easier for early warning signs to go unnoticed—especially when:
- family visits happen less frequently than care-team documentation suggests,
- residents spend long stretches in wheelchairs or recliners (not just beds),
- skin changes are subtle at first (light redness, warmth, discoloration), and
- wound care updates are discussed verbally but not thoroughly recorded.
When a bedsore is discovered, it can feel like it appeared “out of nowhere.” In reality, a pressure ulcer usually develops over time. The legal question becomes whether the facility recognized risk and responded appropriately as the injury progressed.


