Pressure ulcers often don’t appear “out of nowhere.” In real Vienna-area situations, families frequently report similar warning signs:
- You toured or checked in during the day, then the change was noticed later—after the weekend, after staffing shifts changed, or after you returned from work or travel.
- A resident became more immobile after an illness, surgery, or fall—yet the care plan updates didn’t seem to match the new risk.
- You raised concerns, but skin checks, repositioning, or wound follow-up didn’t improve when you expected.
- Documentation looked inconsistent: wound descriptions didn’t match what you were told, dates were unclear, or care notes didn’t align with what staff said.
Virginia nursing home neglect cases often hinge on timelines. The facility may argue the ulcer was unavoidable due to the resident’s condition. Your claim is strongest when the record shows the facility recognized risk and responded too late—or not at all.


