Pressure ulcers aren’t just painful—they can be a sign that essential care steps weren’t followed consistently. In Texas nursing homes, facilities are expected to identify skin-risk early and follow a care plan designed to prevent breakdown, including appropriate repositioning, skin checks, and timely wound treatment.
In the real world, families in Corsicana often report similar patterns:
- the first noticeable change appears after a period of missed or delayed turning/assistance
- staff respond after redness becomes an open wound
- wound care documentation doesn’t match what family members observed
- care plans appear in the chart, but progress notes show gaps in execution
When those issues line up with the resident’s risk factors—limited mobility, medical conditions that affect sensation, or reliance on staff for repositioning—the question becomes whether the facility met Texas standards of reasonable care.


