In many Greenville communities—especially where residents require hands-on repositioning—families see warning signs in the gaps between visits. A resident may look fine during the afternoon, then visitors later notice redness, swelling, or a dressing that wasn’t there before.
That pattern doesn’t automatically prove neglect, but it does create a common evidence issue: the facility’s paperwork should show risk assessment, skin checks, and wound response before the ulcer worsened. If the documentation trail starts only after families raise concerns, that mismatch can be important to a claim.


