In Utah long-term care settings, families often assume the facility will “handle it” once a concern is raised. But pressure ulcers can advance quickly, and nursing homes rely heavily on charting—skin assessments, repositioning documentation, wound measurements, and care plan updates.
In a West Valley City timeline, delays can look like:
- A resident’s redness noticed after a shift change, but not documented as a skin risk right away
- Repositioning schedules that exist on paper, while progress notes show long gaps in monitoring
- Wound updates that arrive late compared to when families say they first observed deterioration
- Care plan revisions that don’t match what wound care providers later describe
A strong claim depends on comparing what the facility recorded with what the resident’s condition shows.


