Pressure ulcers don’t usually appear out of nowhere. They often develop when a resident’s care plan isn’t consistently followed—especially for people who are less able to move, have fragile skin, or struggle with hydration, nutrition, or sensation.
In a Lisbon-area setting, families sometimes notice a pattern that doesn’t match the paperwork: a resident’s condition seems to change between shifts, updates take longer than expected, and early skin irritation is downplayed until it becomes a wound. When that happens, the legal focus typically turns to whether the facility responded in a timely, clinically appropriate way after it had notice of risk.


