Pressure ulcers don’t appear out of nowhere. They typically develop when a resident’s care plan doesn’t match their risk level—or when staff are unable to follow prevention steps consistently.
In real East Ridge-area facilities, common red flags families notice include:
- Residents who remain in the same position too long during busy shifts
- Missing or delayed skin checks after a change in mobility or health
- Care plan updates that don’t seem to reach the floor staff
- Wound care that begins only after visible deterioration
- Gaps in documentation around turning schedules and hygiene assistance
Even when a facility argues the ulcer was “inevitable,” the question for a claim is whether the facility’s monitoring and prevention efforts were reasonable for that resident’s needs.


