Pressure ulcers often surface after a change in a resident’s condition—hospital discharge, a new mobility limitation, or a period of illness. In the De Pere area, families sometimes notice warning signs during visits when they compare what was promised in the care plan with what staff are actually doing.
Common scenarios we see include:
- Post-hospital transitions where the care plan is updated, but risk monitoring doesn’t keep up.
- Long stretches between family check-ins where early redness or skin breakdown isn’t recorded.
- Residents requiring assistance with turning, toileting, or hygiene who spend prolonged time in the same position.
- Wound progression that accelerates after the first signs appear, suggesting the facility didn’t respond quickly enough.
You don’t need to “prove negligence” on your own. But it helps to recognize patterns early—because the strongest claims usually start with a clear timeline.


