A pressure ulcer is more than skin discoloration. When a facility fails to follow a resident’s turning, skin-check, hygiene, and wound-care plan, the injury can escalate—sometimes quickly. In practice, families often notice problems after they’ve been reassured the resident is “being monitored,” especially when visits are scheduled around commuting, work hours, or childcare.
In Choctaw and the broader Oklahoma area, many residents rely on consistent caregiver attention and routine documentation. When care is inconsistent, wound progression can show up in records later than families expect, creating confusion about what was actually done day to day.
A legal claim generally turns on whether the facility met its obligations to assess risk and respond appropriately. Your lawyer’s job is to translate medical timelines into a question the court can understand: Did the facility provide the level of care a reasonably careful nursing home would provide under similar circumstances?


