In and around Hartford, long-term care facilities can face the same operational pressures many communities do: staffing turnover, reliance on agency workers, and shifting schedules. Even when a facility tries to do its best, pressure-ulcer risk increases when:
- turning and repositioning happens inconsistently (or later than ordered)
- skin checks are missed during shift transitions
- residents are left in the same position longer than a care plan requires
- moisture management and wound monitoring aren’t handled promptly
If you noticed that changes seemed to line up with staffing gaps, weekend coverage, or a new care plan, that timeline can matter. The strongest claims tend to connect the resident’s risk with the facility’s response during the period the wound developed.


