Texas long-term care facilities are required to screen residents for risk factors and implement prevention plans. When those steps fail, pressure ulcers can develop even if the facility “seems” attentive day to day.
In Longview and East Texas, families often describe similar patterns when bedsore neglect is involved:
- Inconsistent repositioning for residents who can’t turn themselves (or who need help transferring)
- Delayed response to early redness or skin breakdown that should have triggered wound care adjustments
- Gaps between care plan and practice, especially during shift changes or staffing shortages
- Documentation delays—notes appear later, after the wound is already established
- Nutrition and hydration concerns that reduce healing capacity
Pressure ulcers are staged, and that matters. Once an injury progresses, it may involve deeper tissue damage, infection risk, extended treatment, and a longer recovery timeline. That’s why timing is often central to what a lawyer investigates first.


