In Logan and the surrounding Cache Valley area, families often get involved after a shift change, after a weekend, or during seasonal schedules when it’s harder to visit consistently. That pattern can affect pressure ulcer documentation—especially when staff rely on templated notes instead of detailed skin checks.
Common Logan-area scenario we see:
- A resident returns from a medical appointment or therapy session and later shows redness or an open area.
- A family member reports they raised concerns, but the facility’s written record doesn’t match the timing of what they observed.
- A wound appears after a change in mobility (hospital stay, fall recovery, medication changes) and the care plan wasn’t updated quickly enough.
These gaps aren’t automatically proof of negligence—but they can be critical leads. A lawyer can help you build a timeline that connects risk factors, monitoring, and what the facility actually did.


