Wenatchee is a regional hub—many residents travel from surrounding communities for specialized care, and some facilities handle complex cases with limited room to absorb staffing shortages. In practice, that can mean residents are at higher risk when:
- staffing levels don’t match resident needs during shift changes
- residents require frequent repositioning but records don’t reflect consistent execution
- wound care expertise is delayed or not followed up quickly enough
- care plans aren’t updated when a resident’s condition changes
A pressure ulcer doesn’t automatically prove wrongdoing. But when early warning signs are missed or prevention steps don’t happen as required, the legal analysis often turns on whether the facility responded appropriately once risk was known.


