One pattern we see in the area: residents may arrive with no documented wound, then later return from a hospital visit—or shift into a different unit—where care routines and documentation practices aren’t consistent.
That matters legally because the timeline can be decisive. Your attorney will look for answers to questions like:
- Was a pressure injury present on admission or discovered soon after?
- Did staff update risk assessments after changes in mobility, nutrition, or medical status?
- Were repositioning and skin checks actually carried out during the periods when the ulcer formed?
In Texas, nursing facilities are expected to follow care plans and respond promptly to early signs. When the record shows gaps—especially around transfers—families may have stronger grounds to seek accountability.


