Stafford’s families often juggle work schedules, transportation, and frequent medical appointments. When you’re trying to coordinate care while commuting and managing daily life, it’s easy to miss early changes—especially when staff communicate primarily through brief updates or charting.
But for legal purposes, the most important details are often the ones you can’t see with the naked eye:
- when risk assessments were completed (and whether they were updated)
- whether turning/repositioning was actually performed
- how wound checks were documented
- whether moisture and skin protection steps were followed consistently
When pressure ulcers develop during a period when a resident’s plan called for prevention, the question becomes whether the facility’s systems worked in real life—not just on paper.


