Pressure Sore Claims Solicitors | Bed Sore Negligence

Pressure sore claims solicitors

Pressure Sore Claims for Avoidable Bed Sore Negligence

If you or a family member developed a pressure sore, bed sore or pressure ulcer during hospital care, nursing care, community care or care home support, Med-Cop can help you understand whether avoidable neglect or clinical negligence may be involved.

We advise on pressure sore legal action involving poor risk assessment, missed skin checks, inadequate repositioning, unsuitable mattresses or cushions, poor nutrition and hydration, infection, delayed wound care and stage 3 or stage 4 pressure ulcers.

Free initial adviceNo obligationNo Win No Fee consideredEngland and Wales claims

Hospital & NHS Pressure Sores

Claims may arise where ward care, ICU care, post-surgical care or discharge planning failed to protect vulnerable skin from avoidable damage.

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Care Home & Nursing Negligence

We can discuss legal advice for elderly pressure sores, nursing home pressure sores and failures in repositioning, monitoring or escalation.

Common failures

No Win No Fee Advice

Eligible pressure sore compensation claims may be considered for No Win No Fee funding, subject to evidence, prospects and terms.

Funding options
Clear legal advice

Pressure Sore Claims Depend on Care Records, Risk Evidence and Causation.

Pressure sores, also called pressure ulcers or bed sores, can develop when pressure, rubbing or shearing damages the skin and underlying tissue. They are more likely where a person has limited mobility, fragile skin, poor circulation, reduced sensation, poor nutrition, recent surgery or serious illness.

Not every pressure sore automatically means negligence. A claim usually needs evidence that the care provider failed to take reasonable steps to assess risk, prevent skin breakdown, respond to early warning signs or treat the wound properly — and that this failure caused avoidable injury or worsening.

We assess whether risk assessments, care plans and pressure-relief measures were adequate.
We look at whether staff acted on redness, blistering, pain, infection, wound deterioration or other warning signs.
We explain medical records, tissue viability evidence, expert reports, compensation and limitation dates in plain English.
What can pressure sore negligence involve?

Common Failures Behind Pressure Sore Legal Action

A pressure sore claim may be possible where the care should have reduced the risk of skin breakdown or prevented a sore from becoming worse. This can involve NHS care, private healthcare, hospital wards, intensive care, post-operative care, community nursing, rehabilitation, care homes or nursing homes.

Key questions include whether the patient was properly assessed, whether a prevention plan was made, whether repositioning and equipment were provided, whether the wound was escalated quickly, and whether records show safe ongoing care.

Your health comes first. If a pressure sore looks infected, is worsening, causing severe pain or is accompanied by fever, urgent medical help should be sought. This page is legal information, not medical advice.

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Common issues we investigate
Poor Risk Assessment

No clear Waterlow, Braden, Norton or similar risk assessment, or a risk score ignored.

No Repositioning Plan

Failure to turn, reposition, mobilise or relieve pressure at suitable intervals.

Missed Skin Checks

Redness, discolouration, blistering, pain, warmth or early skin changes not acted on.

Wrong Equipment

No pressure-relieving mattress, cushion, heel protector or specialist surface when needed.

Nutrition & Hydration Failures

Poor monitoring of diet, fluids, weight loss, swallowing issues or malnutrition risk.

Moisture & Incontinence

Skin exposed to moisture, sweat or continence issues without proper protection.

Delayed Wound Care

Late tissue viability referral, poor dressings, delayed cleaning or poor infection control.

Poor Records & Handover

Gaps in turning charts, wound charts, care plans, escalation notes or discharge summaries.

Every case depends on the facts, records, expert evidence and whether avoidable harm can be linked to a breach of duty.
Advisory areas

Pressure Sore and Bed Sore Claim Types

Med-Cop can review a wide range of pressure sore compensation claims involving avoidable pressure ulcers, worsening wounds, poor nursing care and delayed treatment.

Hospital Pressure Sore Claims

Advice where pressure ulcers developed during A&E, ward, ICU, post-operative, rehabilitation or discharge care.

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NHS Pressure Sore Claims

Claims involving NHS hospitals, community nursing, district nurses, discharge planning or failure to follow prevention measures.

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Care Home Pressure Sores

Legal advice for pressure sores in care homes where monitoring, repositioning, nutrition or escalation may have failed.

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Nursing Home Pressure Sores

Support for families concerned about nursing home pressure sore negligence, poor care plans or inadequate wound management.

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Elderly Pressure Sore Claims

Claims involving elderly or frail patients with reduced mobility, fragile skin, dementia, poor nutrition or high dependency needs.

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Stage 3 Pressure Sore Claims

Advice where full-thickness skin loss, deep tissue injury, infection risk or delayed treatment caused serious avoidable harm.

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Stage 4 Pressure Sore Claims

Claims involving deep wounds, muscle or bone exposure, osteomyelitis risk, surgery, scarring, amputation or long-term care needs.

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Infected Pressure Sores

Advice where infection, sepsis concern, antibiotics, hospital admission, debridement or surgical treatment followed poor wound care.

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Heel Pressure Sores

Claims involving avoidable heel ulcers, ankle wounds, foot sores, lack of heel offloading or unsuitable support surfaces.

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Sacrum, Coccyx & Buttocks

Legal help for sacral, coccyx, buttock or ischial pressure sores linked to immobility, sitting, moisture or poor turning care.

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Pressure Sores After Surgery

Claims where immobilisation, anaesthetic recovery, post-operative weakness or hospital delays contributed to skin breakdown.

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Fatal Pressure Sore Claims

Advice for families where pressure sore infection, sepsis, deterioration or poor care may have contributed to death.

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Understanding stages

The Four Stages of a Pressure Sore and Why They Matter Legally

Clinical records may refer to category, grade or stage. The wording can vary, but the legal issue is whether reasonable prevention, monitoring and treatment steps were taken at the right time.

Stage 1 pressure sore

Intact skin with persistent discolouration, warmth, hardness, pain or itching. Early action is important because this may be a warning sign.

Stage 2 pressure sore

Partial skin loss, blistering or a shallow open wound. Records should show pressure relief, wound care, monitoring and escalation where needed.

Stage 3 pressure sore

Full-thickness skin loss involving deeper tissue. Expert evidence may be needed to assess preventability, treatment and avoidable deterioration.

Stage 4 pressure sore

Deep tissue damage that may involve muscle, tendon or bone. These claims can involve infection, surgery, long recovery and significant losses.

Unstageable wounds

Some wounds are obscured by slough or dead tissue, so the true depth is unclear until the wound is cleaned or assessed by specialists.

Deep tissue injury

Discoloured or painful skin may indicate deeper damage even before an open wound is visible. Prompt recognition can be crucial.

Evidence checklist

How to Prove Pressure Sore Negligence

Pressure sore claims are evidence-led. We look for what the care provider knew, what they should have done, what was recorded and whether the wound or losses were avoidable.

Medical and care records

Hospital notes, GP records, nursing notes, care home records, discharge summaries and community nursing records.

Risk assessments

Waterlow, Braden, Norton or other skin integrity risk assessments, including whether they were updated after deterioration.

Care plans and turning charts

Repositioning records, mobility plans, pressure-relief schedules, continence care and daily skin inspection records.

Wound charts and photographs

Wound size, stage, location, photographs, dressing changes, tissue viability notes and infection observations.

Equipment records

Pressure mattresses, overlays, cushions, heel protectors, boots, chair cushions and when they were requested or provided.

Nutrition and hydration notes

MUST scores, dietetic referrals, weight loss records, fluid balance, swallowing issues and meal support records.

Complaint and incident documents

Complaint responses, duty of candour letters, safeguarding referrals, internal reviews and serious incident documents.

Independent expert evidence

Expert opinion may be needed on nursing standards, tissue viability, causation, prognosis and the value of the claim.

Pressure sore compensation

How Much Compensation Can a Pressure Sore Claim Be Worth?

There is no safe average payout for pressure sore negligence. A stage 1 pressure sore that heals quickly is valued very differently from a stage 4 pressure ulcer involving infection, surgery, long-term pain, scarring, disability or death.

What compensation may include

  • Pain, suffering and loss of amenity
  • Delayed recovery, infection or wound deterioration
  • Scarring, surgery, debridement or grafting
  • Care and assistance from family or paid carers
  • Private treatment, dressings, equipment or travel costs
  • Lost earnings, pension loss or reduced ability to work
  • Adaptations, mobility aids or specialist seating
  • Fatal claim losses where negligence contributed to death

Why we do not use a pressure sore compensation calculator

Online calculators can be misleading because they cannot assess breach of duty, causation, medical prognosis, care needs or documentary evidence. A proper valuation usually requires medical records, photographs, expert evidence, a schedule of loss and a careful review of how the wound affected day-to-day life.

We can give you a clearer view once we understand the stage, location, healing time, infection issues, ongoing symptoms, care needs and the evidence available.

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Claim process

How a Pressure Sore Claim Usually Starts

We keep the first step practical. You do not need to have every record or photograph before asking for advice.

Tell us what happened

We ask where the sore developed, who provided care, when it was noticed and how it affected recovery.

Identify the key records

We consider hospital, care home, GP, nursing, tissue viability and complaint documents that may be needed.

Assess breach and causation

The evidence is reviewed to decide whether care fell below standard and caused avoidable harm.

Explain your options

You receive clear advice on prospects, funding, evidence, time limits and the next step before proceeding.

Funding options

No Win No Fee Pressure Sore Claims

Where the evidence and prospects justify investigation, a pressure sore claim may be considered under a No Win No Fee agreement. This is also called a conditional fee agreement.

Funding is always subject to assessment and written terms. Before you decide, you should understand any success fee, insurance position, deductions, risks and what happens if the claim does not succeed.

Check Eligibility

We can discuss:

  • No Win No Fee pressure sore claims where suitable
  • Claims involving NHS, private care, care homes or nursing homes
  • Stage 3 and stage 4 pressure sore compensation claims
  • Claims for elderly relatives and vulnerable adults
  • What happens if the person affected lacks capacity or has died
Time limits

How Long Do I Have to Start a Pressure Sore Claim?

In many clinical negligence and personal injury claims in England and Wales, the usual limitation period is three years from the date of injury or the date you first knew the injury may be linked to negligent care.

Different rules can apply for children, adults who lack mental capacity, fatal claims and cases where the date of knowledge is disputed. Because pressure sore claims often involve older or vulnerable people, capacity and limitation should be checked early.

Do not wait for a complaint response if the limitation date may be close. Taking advice early helps protect evidence, photographs, records and witness recollection.

Act quickly if any of these apply
The wound is recent

Early photographs and records can be important before dressings, healing or discharge changes the evidence.

The person has died

Fatal claims may involve different deadlines, records and dependency or bereavement issues.

Capacity is unclear

A litigation friend or deputy may be needed where the injured person cannot manage a claim.

The care provider changed

Hospital, care home, district nursing and GP records may need to be preserved and requested separately.

This section is general information only. Always obtain legal advice on limitation dates for the specific facts of the case.
Speak to Med-Cop

Based in Bradford, Helping Clients Across England and Wales

You do not need to know whether you definitely have a pressure sore claim before contacting us. Tell us what happened and we will help you understand whether the care should be investigated.

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Med-Cop | Clinical Negligence Solicitors
13-15 Claremont
Bradford
West Yorkshire
BD7 1BG

Telephone: [Placeholder Number]
Email: [Placeholder Email]

Office hours: Monday to Friday, 9:00am to 5:30pm

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Free Pressure Sore Claim Assessment

Complete the form below and a member of the team will contact you to discuss your situation. Your enquiry is confidential and there is no obligation to proceed.

By submitting this form, you agree that we may contact you about your enquiry. Please do not include highly sensitive medical details unless necessary at this stage.
Questions

Pressure Sore Claims FAQs

These FAQs are written for England and Wales and should be checked by the client before publishing.

A pressure sore claim is a legal claim where avoidable skin and tissue damage was caused or made worse by negligent care. It may involve hospital care, nursing care, community care, care home support or poor wound management.

Yes. The terms pressure sore, pressure ulcer and bed sore are often used for similar injuries caused by pressure, rubbing or shearing that damages skin and underlying tissue, usually where mobility is reduced.

Possibly. A hospital pressure sore claim may be considered if the records show that staff failed to assess risk, reposition the patient, check the skin, provide suitable equipment, escalate deterioration or treat the wound properly.

A claim may be possible where a care home or nursing home failed to provide reasonable pressure area care, skin checks, turning support, nutrition and hydration monitoring, equipment or prompt medical escalation.

Proof usually involves medical records, nursing notes, risk assessments, care plans, turning charts, wound charts, photographs, tissue viability notes, complaint documents and independent expert evidence on breach of duty and causation.

Useful evidence can include dated photographs, discharge letters, wound dressing notes, care home records, pressure mattress records, nutrition notes, complaint responses, safeguarding documents and details of how the wound affected daily life.

Yes, where negligence caused or worsened the injury. Stage 3 and stage 4 pressure sore claims can be serious because they may involve deep tissue loss, infection, surgery, scarring, long recovery, mobility problems or increased care needs.

Eligible pressure sore claims may be considered for No Win No Fee funding if the evidence and prospects of success justify investigation. Funding terms should be explained clearly before you decide whether to proceed.

There is no reliable average payout. The value depends on the wound stage, pain, infection, healing time, scarring, surgery, care needs, financial losses, prognosis and whether the pressure sore caused long-term harm or death.

Poor health or limited mobility does not automatically prevent a claim. In fact, those risks may mean stronger prevention measures were needed. The legal question is whether reasonable care would have avoided or reduced the pressure sore injury.

In many cases, the usual limitation period is three years from the date of injury or date of knowledge. Different rules can apply for children, adults lacking capacity and fatal claims, so legal advice should be taken early.

No. It can help if you have photographs, complaint responses, discharge notes or care home updates, but you do not need every record before asking for initial advice.