Many Elkhorn-area families first notice a pressure injury after a visit—sometimes during an evening check-in or when a loved one’s routine has changed. You may see redness that doesn’t fade, a scabbed area, drainage, or a new complaint of discomfort.
In a claim, the critical issue is often not that a resident developed a pressure injury—it’s whether the facility responded in a timely, preventive way consistent with Wisconsin standards of long-term care. That means looking closely at:
- Whether the resident was identified early as high risk
- Whether staff followed the turning/repositioning plan
- Whether skin checks and wound assessments were recorded on schedule
- Whether moisture and friction were managed (especially for residents with incontinence)
- Whether the facility escalated care when early signs appeared


