A pressure ulcer doesn’t usually appear “out of nowhere.” It typically develops when skin and underlying tissue are exposed to sustained pressure, friction, or shear—especially when residents can’t reliably reposition themselves.
In Texas nursing home settings, families frequently notice warning patterns such as:
- Staff documenting turning or skin checks, but the resident’s condition worsening over days
- Delays in ordering wound care once redness or skin breakdown is noticed
- Care plans that don’t match what families see during routine visits
- Inconsistent follow-through on moisture management and barrier protection
These issues are serious because the standard of care in long-term facilities is built around prevention and timely response. When those safeguards fail, legal claims may follow.


