In practice, pressure ulcers aren’t just about “skin.” They’re often a sign that basic prevention measures weren’t carried out consistently for a resident who needed them.
In Williamsport-area facilities, families frequently raise concerns tied to real-world care routines:
- Inconsistent repositioning when residents can’t change positions on their own
- Delayed wound evaluation after redness or breakdown is first noticed
- Care plan drift, where written instructions don’t match daily practice
- Documentation lag, where progress notes don’t reflect what families observed
When a pressure ulcer is avoidable with appropriate monitoring and timely treatment, Pennsylvania law generally looks at whether the facility met the standard of reasonable care under the circumstances.


