Pressure ulcers are not just uncomfortable skin changes. In elder care settings, they can signal breakdowns in daily prevention—especially when residents have limited mobility, rely on others for repositioning, or have conditions that increase risk.
In practical terms, families in the Millington area often notice patterns such as:
- Turning/repositioning that doesn’t happen on schedule
- Delayed responses after staff are alerted to redness or “hot spots”
- Inconsistent wound checks or missing documentation of skin assessments
- Care plan updates that lag behind the resident’s actual condition
Tennessee facilities are expected to follow resident assessments and care plans in a way that reasonably prevents avoidable harm. When bedsores develop and the record doesn’t support appropriate prevention and response, that gap is where legal accountability may begin.


