In North Texas, many families rely on nursing homes and skilled nursing centers for residents who live with mobility limits, diabetes, circulation problems, or neurological conditions. Those medical realities are exactly why facilities must follow strict skin-risk protocols.
A pressure ulcer is typically not an “accident.” It often reflects breakdowns such as:
- missed or incomplete skin checks during shift changes
- repositioning not done often enough (or not documented)
- delays in wound care escalation
- care plan updates not matching the resident’s changing mobility or nutrition
When families in Sachse notice a worsening wound, it’s common for the timeline to feel confusing—especially if caregivers provided updates inconsistently or if the first signs were documented late. That’s why the early phase of a claim is about building a clear timeline from the records.


