In many nursing home settings across Ohio, pressure ulcers are preventable when staff follow the resident’s care plan and respond to early skin changes.
When a facility says the injury “just happens,” ask a different question: what did the facility do to prevent it based on the resident’s risk level?
Common prevention failures we see in elder neglect matters include:
- Turning/repositioning not happening on schedule
- Skin checks not occurring at the frequency required by the care plan
- Delayed wound care once redness or skin breakdown appeared
- Inconsistent documentation that doesn’t match the resident’s clinical status
For families in Portage County—including Ravenna—this matters because residents are often moved between settings (rehab after hospitalization, then skilled nursing), and records from each transfer can create gaps. A strong case often turns on closing those gaps.


