Pressure ulcers are more than an unpleasant medical issue. They often reflect breakdowns in daily care—like missed turning schedules, delayed wound assessment, insufficient moisture control, or failure to respond when early redness appears.
Families in the Midlothian area commonly report these red flags:
- Skin changes noticed during a family visit after periods when a resident was left for extended stretches without a clear check-in.
- Inconsistent updates about wound stage, measurements, or treatment progress.
- Care plan updates that arrive late—sometimes only after the wound becomes more severe.
- Gaps between what staff told you verbally and what’s written in the record.
If the injury progressed quickly, it’s especially important to focus on timing. Texas cases often turn on whether the facility recognized risk early and responded in a way that aligns with accepted standards of nursing care.


