Pressure ulcers don’t appear “out of nowhere.” They usually develop when a resident’s risk is underestimated or when the facility doesn’t reliably follow the care plan meant to prevent skin breakdown.
In practice, families in the San Antonio–area often describe the same pattern:
- A resident spends long stretches in one position (bed or wheelchair)
- Turning schedules are missed or not documented
- Staff respond slowly after family reports redness or swelling
- Wound care begins late, after the injury has worsened
- Changes in mobility, diet, or hydration aren’t matched with updated skin-risk monitoring
Texas law looks at whether a facility acted with reasonable care under the circumstances. When pressure ulcers are preventable with consistent repositioning, skin checks, and appropriate wound treatment, the facility’s failure can become a liability issue.


