In the Princeton area, families often recognize problems during visits after work or weekend routines—when they notice a resident looks uncomfortable, clothing is damp, or skin appears red over the same bony spots. Pressure ulcers don’t usually appear “out of nowhere.” They commonly develop when a facility misses a combination of duties such as:
- turning and repositioning on an appropriate schedule
- skin checks at the frequency required for high-risk residents
- timely wound care once early redness appears
- assistance with hygiene and moisture control
- coordination between nursing, dietary, and clinicians
Even when a facility claims “it was unavoidable,” the question becomes whether the resident’s risk was handled with the level of care a reasonably careful provider would use—especially once early symptoms were observable.


