In the Cayce area, many residents live with chronic conditions—limited mobility, diabetes, stroke-related impairments, dementia, and other health issues that increase pressure-ulcer risk. When staffing levels are stretched or care documentation is inconsistent, families may notice a problem only after it has advanced.
Common “late discovery” patterns we see in South Carolina long-term care cases include:
- A resident is moved between rooms or caregivers and the turning/wound routine changes without clear communication.
- Family visits occur at predictable times (after work or weekends), but the injury develops during unobserved periods.
- Warning signs—redness, warmth, skin breakdown, persistent discomfort—are dismissed as “temporary” instead of triggering an immediate care-plan update.
- Wound care is delayed while staff dispute whether the change is from the resident’s underlying condition.
If you’re thinking, “We raised concerns, but nothing changed,” that’s not unusual. The question becomes whether the facility responded the way a reasonably careful provider would have under the same circumstances.


