Lancaster is a suburban community with residents who frequently rely on long-term care after illness, surgery, or mobility-limiting conditions. In practice, pressure ulcers can worsen quickly when a resident’s risk status changes—for example, after hospitalization, a fall, or a decline in walking ability.
Local families often describe similar patterns:
- New redness after a recent discharge (when staff should reassess skin risk and update care)
- Long stretches between assistance during busy shift changes
- Documentation that doesn’t match what you were told during visits
- Unclear wound-care schedules or “we’ll address it later” responses
In Texas, facilities are expected to follow accepted standards of care and maintain adequate records. When that system fails, pressure sore injuries can become evidence of neglect—not just a medical complication.


