In many long-term care situations, the first sign is small and easy to dismiss: redness that doesn’t fade, a persistent sore near the tailbone/hips/heels, or a wound that seems to appear “out of nowhere.” By the time a family member pushes for answers, the injury may already have progressed.
Stillwater families often describe patterns like:
- Noticing changes after a weekend or a period of limited visits
- Wound progression that seems faster than what staff initially explained
- Confusion about what the care plan required vs. what documentation shows
- Repeated reassurance without a clear timeline of skin assessments and wound treatment
Those early discrepancies matter. Oklahoma cases frequently turn on whether the facility recognized risk and responded promptly—not just whether a pressure ulcer existed.


