Pressure ulcers don’t appear overnight. They typically develop when someone stays in one position too long, skin isn’t monitored closely, or early warning signs aren’t acted on.
In nursing homes across the Two Rivers area, families sometimes report similar patterns:
- Care interruptions after transitions (admission, discharge from a hospital, or a short-term rehab stay)
- Missed or delayed repositioning during shift handoffs or understaffed periods
- Skin changes noticed by family that staff acknowledge—but documentation shows a lag in assessment or wound staging
- Nutrition/hydration concerns that don’t trigger timely adjustments to the care plan
Even when a resident has medical risk factors, Wisconsin negligence claims focus on whether the facility provided reasonable, timely preventive care for that resident—not whether injury is “possible,” but whether the facility responded appropriately.


