In Wisconsin long-term care settings, residents are entitled to care that meets expected professional standards—especially for individuals who are immobile, have limited sensation, or rely on others for turning and skin monitoring.
Pressure ulcers often start subtly: redness that doesn’t fade, skin breakdown over a bony area, or deterioration that family members only recognize after it’s advanced. Legally, the focus is typically on whether the facility responded appropriately to the resident’s risk level and condition—not on whether the wound could be medically complicated in every case.
For Grafton families, a practical takeaway is this: you’ll usually need more than “we noticed a sore.” You’ll need records and timelines that show what was known, what should have been done, and how care matched—or failed to match—those expectations.


