In Weston’s suburban and rural surroundings, families often balance work schedules, travel time, and long gaps between visits. That can create a practical problem: pressure ulcers can start small and worsen quickly—especially when a resident is:
- confined to bed or a chair for much of the day,
- unable to feel discomfort (neuropathy, dementia, sedation),
- managing incontinence or skin irritation,
- recovering from surgery or illness and becoming less mobile.
The key issue is not just that a sore appeared. The legal question is whether staff performed the kinds of risk-based skin monitoring, turning/repositioning, moisture control, and wound care escalation that Wisconsin patients should reasonably expect.


