In many Dayton-area cases, the key question isn’t just whether a pressure ulcer exists—it’s when it developed and what the facility did once risk was identified.
You may be looking at a timeline that overlaps with real-world facility patterns, such as:
- residents returning from local hospitals after surgery or illness (and needing careful repositioning and skin checks)
- staffing strain during shift changes, weekends, or high census periods
- gaps in documentation after transfers between units
- wounds worsening quickly after family members raised concerns
Ohio claims often turn on whether the facility’s care matched what a reasonably careful nursing home should do for that resident’s risk level—especially when records show risk factors like limited mobility, diabetes, dehydration, incontinence, or poor nutrition.


