Pressure ulcers usually don’t appear “out of nowhere.” They’re often linked to breakdowns in routine care—especially for residents who spend long hours in bed or in wheelchairs.
In Puyallup area facilities, families commonly report concerns like:
- Missed or inconsistent turning schedules (especially after nights/weekends)
- Delayed response to early skin changes (redness, warmth, non-blanching marks)
- Gaps in documentation of skin checks and wound monitoring
- Insufficient mobility assistance for residents who require repositioning
- Nutrition or hydration lapses that affect healing and skin integrity
These issues can be even harder to detect when you’re at work or dealing with Pierce County commute timing. That’s why the legal question becomes practical: What did the facility know, when did they know it, and what did they do next?


