Pressure ulcers develop when pressure, friction, or shearing forces aren’t managed with the right turning schedule, skin checks, and wound response. But the key legal point is timing:
- A resident arriving without a pressure ulcer, then developing one shortly after intake can raise serious questions.
- A wound that worsens during periods when families report staffing stress or delayed communication can suggest preventable gaps.
- Changes in mobility (after illness, surgery, or hospitalization) can increase risk—facilities must adjust care plans promptly.
In practice, Mint Hill-area families often report that they raised concerns informally (“they’re not turning him like they said,” “I don’t see skin checks,” “the redness wasn’t there last week”). Those observations don’t replace medical proof—but they can help guide what your attorney looks for in the facility’s documentation.


