Pressure ulcers in long-term care frequently follow a predictable pattern—especially when residents are medically fragile, have limited mobility, or require frequent repositioning.
Families in the Leon Valley/San Antonio region often report warning signs like:
- Skin redness that appears during a period between family visits
- Changes after a hospitalization, when the facility assumes the resident will “bounce back” without tightening the care plan
- Wound care that seems delayed or documented only after the ulcer becomes more severe
- Inconsistent answers from staff when asked whether repositioning, hygiene, and skin checks are being done on schedule
A lawyer’s job is not to blame caregivers emotionally—it’s to connect the dots between documented risk, care plan requirements, what was actually done, and how the wound progressed.


