In day-to-day Laurinburg life, many families juggle work schedules and travel time to check on residents. That can make early warning signs easy to miss—especially when the first signs are subtle:
- New redness that doesn’t fade after brief pressure relief
- Skin tears or breakdown over the tailbone, hips, heels, or elbows
- Reports of “they’ve been sleeping a lot” followed by delayed turning or repositioning
- Bad wound odor, drainage, or sudden worsening after a care routine change
- Confusing explanations about whether the injury was present on admission
When pressure ulcers develop, the legal question usually isn’t “how bad is the wound today?” It’s whether the facility recognized risk and followed an appropriate prevention plan consistently—then responded promptly when skin changes appeared.


