In Cary and the surrounding Triangle area, families often juggle work schedules, commuting, and frequent travel between home and medical appointments. That can make it easier for warning signs to be overlooked—especially when communication from the facility is inconsistent.
Pressure ulcers typically develop when residents who are high-risk are not managed properly, including:
- Insufficient skin checks (or checks that occur too infrequently)
- Gaps in turning/repositioning for residents who can’t move themselves
- Delayed wound care after redness or early tissue damage appears
- Care plan noncompliance (plans exist, but the day-to-day routine doesn’t match)
- Nutrition and hydration issues that weren’t addressed with urgency
When these breakdowns occur, the legal question becomes whether the facility provided reasonable care under the circumstances—not whether a pressure ulcer is “possible,” but whether it was prevented or handled promptly.


