Pressure ulcers typically form when constant pressure, friction, or shearing damages skin and deeper tissue—most often in residents with limited mobility, reduced sensation, or medical conditions that make regular repositioning harder.
What’s crucial is the timeline. If the facility’s records show the resident was already high-risk, but wound prevention steps weren’t followed consistently, that gap can support a negligence claim. In West Virginia, nursing home neglect cases commonly turn on whether the documentation and care provided match what a reasonable facility should do for that resident’s risk level.


