Families sometimes assume bedsores appear only after long hospital stays or unavoidable medical decline. In practice, pressure ulcers often develop when everyday care tasks don’t happen consistently—especially for residents who are less mobile.
In Cheyenne, we commonly see pressure-ulcer risk connected to real-world facility pressures and resident needs, such as:
- Residents needing frequent turning/position changes but not receiving them on schedule
- Gaps in skin checks or delayed documentation of early redness
- Delays in responding to a wound that should have triggered escalation
- Inconsistent hygiene routines for residents with incontinence or limited mobility
- Care plan instructions that exist on paper but don’t match what staff actually did
Even when a facility has a written protocol, the legal question is whether the resident’s care was managed with reasonable attention to risk.


