Kenosha has a mix of long-term care settings—some residents stay for years, others transition after hospitalization. In both situations, pressure ulcers can emerge when routine prevention isn’t carried out consistently.
Common Kenosha-area patterns we see in these cases include:
- Inconsistent skin checks for residents with limited mobility (especially after staffing changes)
- Delays in repositioning for bedbound or chair-bound residents
- Gaps in wound-care follow-through, such as when early-stage marks weren’t escalated
- Documentation that doesn’t match the timeline families describe (for example, a wound appears to have progressed faster than the chart reflects)
- Care plan issues—a plan may exist on paper, but the steps aren’t happening with the frequency required
Pressure ulcers develop due to pressure, friction, or shearing over time. Legally, the question becomes whether your loved one received the level of prevention and monitoring a reasonably careful facility would provide under similar circumstances.


