Roy is a growing Wasatch Front community, and many families rely on nearby long-term care and skilled nursing centers during aging, recovery, or complex medical needs. When a pressure ulcer appears, families often assume the injury was unavoidable. But in many cases, pressure ulcers point to breakdowns in consistent repositioning, skin monitoring, moisture management, and wound escalation.
Even when staff members mean well, pressure ulcers can worsen when:
- a care plan isn’t followed day-to-day,
- staffing levels can’t support required turn schedules,
- documentation lags behind what family members notice,
- or early skin changes aren’t treated as urgent.
In Roy, families frequently describe a similar pattern: the facility’s paperwork looks “complete,” yet the wound progresses quickly or multiple skin issues appear over time. That disconnect is often where legal review becomes most valuable.


