In long-term care, pressure ulcers are often linked to preventable breakdowns: missed repositioning, inadequate skin checks, delayed wound treatment, or failure to update a care plan after a resident’s condition changes.
The legal question typically isn’t “Did a sore happen?” It’s whether the nursing home responded in a timely, appropriate way once risk was known—and whether documentation matches the level of monitoring a resident required.
In South Jordan, families frequently run into a similar pattern: staff may communicate that “the wound is being treated,” but progress notes, turning logs, or assessment timing don’t line up with what family members observed during visits.


