Pressure ulcers aren’t just an unfortunate medical outcome. In many cases, they reflect breakdowns in routine care—especially for residents who are less mobile or require hands-on assistance.
In Katy-area facilities, families commonly report issues such as:
- Inconsistent turning and repositioning for residents who can’t change positions themselves
- Delayed wound recognition after caregivers notice redness or skin changes
- Gaps in skin checks during shift changes or after staffing fluctuations
- Care plan not matched to the resident’s current needs (for example, after illness or weight loss)
- Slow escalation to wound specialists or clinicians when a wound worsens
When pressure injuries progress—despite a known risk—the legal question becomes whether the facility met the standard of reasonable care for that resident.


