In many neglect cases, the injury isn’t truly a surprise—it’s the result of missed or delayed prevention.
Families in the Oak Creek area commonly report scenarios like:
- Care plans that require frequent repositioning but documentation shows long gaps.
- Skin assessments that weren’t consistently completed after changes in mobility, nutrition, or alertness.
- Wound care escalation delays after redness or early warning signs were raised.
- Transfers between facilities (skilled nursing, rehab, hospital) where risk information wasn’t properly carried forward.
Pressure ulcers are often preventable when staff follow risk assessments and respond promptly to early changes. When they don’t, courts may view it as a failure to meet the standard of reasonable care.


