In coastal and suburban communities like Hampton, it’s common for residents to have changing routines—clinic visits, therapy sessions, short-term stays, and family-driven check-ins around evenings and weekends. Those normal disruptions can make it harder to catch early warning signs.
Pressure ulcers often begin with subtle skin changes. By the time an ulcer becomes visible to family members, the facility may already have documentation gaps—missed skin checks, delayed wound care orders, or inconsistent repositioning records.
If you’re asking, “Could this have been prevented?” you’re asking the right question. The legal issue usually turns on whether the facility responded to risk and early signs the way a reasonable care team would.


