In real nursing home cases, the dispute often isn’t over whether pressure ulcers are serious. It’s whether the facility acted reasonably once risk was known.
Families in the Manchester area commonly run into three roadblocks:
- Care documentation feels overwhelming. Turning schedules, skin checks, wound notes, and progress reports may be spread across different record types.
- The timeline is unclear. Residents may be transferred, hospitalized, or re-assessed—so the first documentation of a bedsore may not match what families believe they saw.
- Facilities push medical-condition explanations. Defense teams frequently argue the ulcer was unavoidable due to illness, mobility limits, or complications.
A strong case depends on aligning the record timeline with the standard of care—and that’s where organized evidence matters.


