Pressure ulcers don’t usually appear “out of nowhere.” In many cases, families later realize there were signs the facility should have addressed sooner—especially during periods when residents are:
- Less mobile, recovering from surgery, or living with conditions that reduce sensation
- Relying on staff for turning and hygiene (and those tasks didn’t happen on schedule)
- Receiving inconsistent nutrition or hydration support, which affects healing
- Sharing rooms or common areas where quick visual checks get rushed
In Conway, families often tell us the same story: they raised concerns after noticing redness or a new wound, but the response felt delayed—or the documentation didn’t match what they were being told. That mismatch matters. It can help an attorney evaluate whether the facility met the standard of care required under South Carolina law.


