In and around Oregon, families often juggle work schedules, transportation to follow-up appointments, and communication gaps between shifts. Those realities can make it harder to catch early skin changes—like persistent redness, warmth, or complaints of soreness—before a pressure ulcer worsens.
We also see cases where:
- A resident is transferred between care settings (hospital → skilled nursing), and the wound history isn’t consistently explained.
- Family members notice changes after visiting, but the facility’s documentation doesn’t clearly match the timeline.
- Staffing strain during busy periods leads to delayed response to skin risk.
A local attorney understands how to work through these facts efficiently so your claim focuses on what matters: when the facility should have recognized risk, what it did (or didn’t do), and how that failure contributed to the injury.


