Charleston’s layout and daily routines—commutes across bridges, traffic around downtown, and the realities of getting to appointments—can delay what families notice and when they can respond. Many residents also spend days in wheelchairs or recliners, which may be normal for their condition, but increases the importance of scheduled repositioning and skin checks.
When those steps slip, families often first learn about the issue when:
- staff report redness “later than expected,”
- wound care escalates quickly, or
- the injury appears to have progressed beyond what was documented.
A lawyer’s job is to convert those concerns into a record-based case: what was known, when it was known, and whether the facility responded like a reasonably careful provider would.


