Pressure ulcers usually don’t appear “out of nowhere.” They often develop after repeated risk exposure—limited mobility, moisture, poor nutrition, or inadequate turning/repositioning.
In many Tennessee cases, the timeline becomes the turning point:
- Was a resident’s risk level documented after admission and during changes in health?
- When did skin changes first get recorded—and did treatment start promptly?
- Were care plans updated when the resident’s condition declined?
A common family pattern in Murfreesboro is noticing issues during a visit—sometimes after a gap of several days—then hearing the wound was “already being monitored.” The legal question is whether monitoring and response matched what a reasonable facility would do under similar circumstances.


