Pressure ulcers don’t usually appear “out of nowhere.” They often develop over time when a resident with limited mobility isn’t turned, repositioned, or monitored closely enough.
Families in the Mont Belvieu area commonly report signs like:
- Missed or delayed turning/repositioning after you brought up concerns
- Bedtime and overnight care gaps (especially on weekends or shift changes)
- Skin redness that looks worse over successive visits
- Hygiene delays or infrequent checks after incontinence
- Wound care that seems to start late or progress without clear documentation
Even when the facility says the resident was “already at risk,” Texas law still expects reasonable preventive care. The legal question becomes whether the facility recognized risk and responded appropriately when changes appeared.


