In Ohio long-term care facilities, residents are supposed to receive care that matches their risk level. That means when someone is immobile, has limited sensation, or struggles with nutrition/hydration, the facility must respond with prevention measures—not just hope the condition improves.
When bedsores develop, families in Barberton often find the same pattern:
- concerns were raised (by family or staff) but documentation didn’t match the concern,
- wound progression was noticed late,
- care plan updates lagged behind the resident’s changing condition,
- or the facility’s explanation conflicts with the medical timeline.
Ohio law allows injured residents and families (through appropriate representatives) to pursue civil claims when negligence contributed to harm. The key is tying the injury to what the facility should have done under the circumstances.


