Pressure ulcers don’t usually appear out of nowhere. In most cases, they develop when a resident’s risk factors—like limited mobility, reduced sensation, or difficulty repositioning—aren’t met with consistent prevention and timely wound response.
In a community like Socorro, families often notice problems after long workdays, school schedules, or commuting from nearby areas. By the time family members get a clear look at the skin, the injury may have progressed.
That timing matters legally. When a facility’s documentation shows risk was known but skin checks, repositioning, hygiene, or wound escalation wasn’t done as expected, it can support a claim that the facility failed to meet the standard of care.


