Pressure ulcers don’t appear out of nowhere. They usually develop when a resident’s risk factors aren’t managed consistently—things like immobility, moisture exposure, poor nutrition, or reduced sensation.
Families in the Granbury area commonly describe patterns such as:
- Turning and repositioning that didn’t match the care plan (missed shifts, rushed care, or no documented schedule)
- Delays in responding to early redness or “non-blanchable” skin changes
- Wound care orders that weren’t followed closely enough to prevent worsening
- Gaps between what was promised during family updates and what later appears in the medical record
Because Texas facilities are expected to document and provide reasonable preventive care, those “small” inconsistencies can matter a lot when a claim is evaluated.


