In many long-term care settings across North Dakota, families aren’t present around the clock. In Fargo, it’s common for adult children to balance work schedules, winter road conditions, and caregiving duties for other family members. That makes it especially critical that the nursing home documents skin checks and repositioning consistently.
Pressure ulcers often become visible only after they’ve progressed. That’s why Fargo families frequently report questions like:
- “They told us they were monitoring—why didn’t we see it earlier?”
- “How could the wound be this bad if the care plan was being followed?”
- “We raised concerns, but the documentation didn’t match what staff told us.”
A lawyer’s job is to separate what was said from what was recorded, and to determine whether the timing suggests a preventable failure.


