In North Texas, many residents enter care after hospital stays—sometimes with limited mobility, diabetes, circulation problems, or cognitive impairments. These conditions increase the risk of pressure ulcers, but they also create a common pattern: families may first notice redness or wound changes only after the injury has progressed.
In practice, that can happen when:
- A resident’s mobility changes during the week but updated skin-risk documentation lags behind
- Repositioning support is inconsistent during busy shifts
- Nutrition and hydration needs aren’t reassessed after weight loss or illness
- Communication between nursing staff and clinicians doesn’t happen quickly when skin changes appear
A legal review focuses on the timeline: when risk should have been recognized, when skin changes were documented, and how quickly care adjustments were made.


