A pressure ulcer (often called a bedsore) usually forms when pressure, friction, or shearing forces remain on the same area long enough to damage skin and deeper tissue. In nursing homes, prevention isn’t a single task—it depends on a chain of care that must work consistently: risk screening, turning/repositioning, hygiene, skin checks, wound response, and coordination with clinical staff.
In Dickinson-area facilities, families commonly report a similar pattern: they notice early changes during visits, but the response seems delayed or the documentation doesn’t match what was observed. That gap—between what staff recorded and what family members saw—can be central to a legal claim.


