Families sometimes notice pressure ulcers after a change—after a hospital visit, after staffing changes, or after a new roommate or care schedule. But in many cases, the underlying risk existed earlier.
For residents in the Calera area, common real-world scenarios include:
- Short staffing windows during high census periods (more residents needing turns, hygiene, and skin checks)
- Care transitions after illness, surgery, or a fall—when mobility decreases quickly
- Delayed wound response after family reports redness, moisture issues, or “not looking right”
The key point: pressure ulcers rarely “appear out of nowhere.” They often develop over days, and the facility’s records should reflect risk assessment, monitoring, and timely intervention.


