In coastal communities like Coos Bay, families frequently have tight schedules—work shifts, commuting between appointments, and caring for other responsibilities. That can make it easy to miss early warning signs until the injury is clearly advanced.
Pressure ulcers can develop when residents aren’t consistently turned and repositioned, when skin checks aren’t documented properly, or when wound care changes aren’t made quickly after early redness appears. In practice, families often report patterns like:
- turning/repositioning that seems inconsistent (or not recorded)
- delays between you raising concerns and staff updating the care plan
- gaps in skin assessment notes during shift changes
- unclear wound progression descriptions in the record
A lawyer’s job is to translate those concerns into what the law requires: showing the facility’s care fell below the standard of reasonable nursing home care and that the pressure injury was caused or worsened by that failure.


