In Easley and across South Carolina, nursing homes are required to follow care standards that are meant to prevent skin breakdown—especially for residents with limited mobility, reduced sensation, diabetes, or conditions that affect circulation.
When pressure ulcers appear, the key question usually isn’t just whether an injury occurred. It’s whether the facility:
- recognized the resident’s risk level promptly,
- performed skin checks and documented them consistently,
- repositioned the resident on an appropriate schedule,
- provided appropriate wound care and escalation when redness worsened,
- followed the care plan without unexplained gaps.
Because visits can be intermittent—work schedules, errands around town, and the realities of driving between appointments—families sometimes notice problems after the fact. That’s exactly why the written record matters so much in these cases.


