Pressure ulcers usually form where skin and tissue are pressed for too long—commonly on the tailbone, hips, heels, and other bony areas. The risk increases when a resident cannot reposition themselves and when a facility’s prevention routine fails.
In practice, families in Ivins often notice a pattern: something seems “off” during daily care, then the problem is either not recognized quickly or it’s recognized only after the wound has already worsened. In Utah, the details of when staff documented risk, when assessments were done, and how quickly wound care escalated can be critical. A lawyer will look for the timeline that shows whether the facility responded within an appropriate window.


