Sherman’s long-term care community serves a mix of residents who may be aging in place, relocating for proximity to family, or transferring between facilities for rehabilitation. In practice, this can mean more handoffs—between hospitals, rehab centers, and nursing homes—where risk levels change quickly.
When a resident arrives with limited mobility, diabetes, poor circulation, dementia, or difficulty communicating discomfort, facilities must treat skin protection as urgent—not routine. Pressure ulcers often don’t “just happen.” They typically develop when preventive steps are inconsistent: repositioning, skin checks, moisture management, support surfaces, and prompt wound care.
When families notice a timeline that doesn’t add up—early redness documented but no escalation, a wound that worsens despite orders, or a care plan that appears not to match what staff did—those gaps can become the foundation of a claim.


