In a nursing home setting, pressure ulcers are often treated as a “medical risk,” but the law looks at whether the facility responded with reasonable care. When a resident develops an ulcer after admission—or when an early warning is missed—it can point to failures such as:
- inconsistent turning/repositioning assistance
- inadequate skin checks or delayed reporting
- care plan gaps for residents with limited mobility or altered sensation
- delays in wound treatment or specialist referral
- documentation that doesn’t line up with what families observed
For Heber families, these concerns can be especially stressful because many residents have complex health histories and may rely on coordinated care among facilities, clinics, and hospitals across the region. When records don’t match the reality of day-to-day care, it becomes harder to answer the question everyone asks: did the facility do what it was supposed to do?


