Texas residents rely on nursing homes and rehab facilities to follow care plans designed around mobility, sensation, nutrition, and skin integrity. Pressure ulcers (often called bedsores) typically develop when sustained pressure and friction aren’t adequately prevented.
In real Coppell family situations, the first signs often show up during routine visits—maybe a new redness after a missed check-in, a wound that appears sooner than expected, or a decline that seems to accelerate between facility updates. The legal significance is that pressure ulcers can indicate failures in prevention and response, including:
- inconsistent assistance with repositioning
- delayed skin assessments
- incomplete wound monitoring
- care plan updates that lag behind a resident’s changing condition
- gaps in communication between staff and clinical leadership


