In Northeast Ohio, many families assume “the facility will notice.” But in practice, pressure ulcers can develop when a resident’s risk level isn’t matched with the day-to-day care they receive.
Common local scenarios we see in Ohio long-term care include:
- Residents with limited mobility who need consistent repositioning while being transported between rooms, activities, or appointments.
- High-turnover staff or understaffing that leads to missed skin checks, delayed wound escalation, or incomplete documentation.
- Residents returning from hospitals (including rehab stays) with updated care needs that aren’t immediately reflected in daily routines.
- Inconsistent follow-through on care plans—especially when staff shift changes overlap with bathing, toileting, and repositioning schedules.
The key point: pressure ulcers are often a “care gap” signal. A lawyer’s job is to examine whether the facility’s systems and resident-specific plan were reasonably followed.


