Pressure ulcers don’t appear out of nowhere. They develop when a resident is exposed to pressure, friction, or shearing for too long—often in combination with limited mobility and medical risk factors.
In local practice, families commonly describe patterns that deserve attention:
- Missed or inconsistent turning schedules (especially during shift changes or when staffing feels stretched)
- Delayed responses to early redness or skin changes reported by family
- Gaps in wound documentation—for example, records that don’t match what was observed in person
- Care plan drift, where the plan exists on paper but isn’t reflected in day-to-day notes
Richmond families also tell us how hard it can be to advocate when they’re balancing work hours on busy roads and coordinating visits. That’s precisely why pressure ulcer claims often focus on what the facility documented—and whether that documentation shows reasonable prevention and timely treatment.


