In Manassas Park and the surrounding Northern Virginia area, many families rely on long-term care facilities while balancing work, school, and commuting on busy corridors. That reality can make it especially hard to catch problems early—especially when a resident is nonverbal, has limited sensation, or spends most of the day in a wheelchair or bed.
A pressure ulcer may become a legal concern when there’s evidence the facility:
- missed early warning signs (redness, skin tenderness, persistent moisture)
- didn’t follow the resident’s documented risk level and turning/skin-check plan
- failed to escalate treatment when a wound started worsening
- provided inadequate wound care or delayed referral to appropriate medical providers
The strongest cases typically focus less on the fact that a sore occurred and more on the facility’s response—what staff knew, what they documented, what they did (or didn’t do), and how the wound progressed.


