Pressure ulcers are often preventable when residents are assessed consistently and turned/repositioned on an appropriate schedule, with timely wound care and clear communication among staff.
In practice, Riverton-area families sometimes report patterns that can signal neglect:
- Skin changes noticed during visits but followed by slow or vague responses
- Inconsistent repositioning (for example, the resident seems uncomfortable at certain times of day)
- Gaps in wound documentation or unclear explanations about how quickly staff responded
- Care plan not matching reality, such as missing turning schedules or incomplete monitoring
- Complications that escalate, like infection, hospitalization, or prolonged wound treatment
Wyoming cases often turn on whether the facility followed its own policies and the standard of care expected in long-term care settings—not just whether a sore occurred.


