Pressure ulcers don’t happen overnight, and they generally follow patterns—limited mobility, reduced sensation, inconsistent repositioning, and delayed wound response. In practice, families in Wilmington commonly report issues like:
- Gaps in turning/repositioning when a resident needs help shifting positions
- Delayed recognition of early redness or skin changes
- Inconsistent hygiene and moisture control, especially for residents with incontinence
- Short staffing or rotating caregivers leading to missed care-plan steps
- Slow coordination between nursing staff and wound care/clinical oversight
The key point: a facility is expected to manage risk proactively. When documentation doesn’t match the care that should have occurred, it can support a negligence claim.


