Utah nursing homes are required to provide care that meets accepted professional standards. Pressure ulcers are a known risk for residents who have limited mobility, reduced sensation, or medical conditions that affect circulation and skin health.
Legally, the central issue is often not whether a pressure ulcer occurred—it’s whether the facility:
- Recognized risk soon enough
- Followed the resident’s care plan (including repositioning/turning and skin checks)
- Adjusted care when the resident changed (for example, after illness, weight loss, dehydration, or a hospitalization)
- Provided appropriate wound treatment and escalation when early skin damage appeared
In many Murray cases, the timeline matters because families may see early redness or discoloration that gets documented too late—or not treated as a warning sign.


