Many pressure ulcer cases follow a pattern: a resident looks “fine” one week, then family members see redness, open skin, or swelling after a shift in routine—sometimes during periods when staffing is stretched thin or when care is delayed.
In local practice, we commonly see concerns raised after:
- Missed or irregular turning/positioning during longer stretches between checks
- Delays in responding to early redness (waiting until skin is broken)
- Gaps in wound treatment documentation after transfers or changes in condition
- Family reports not being reflected in progress notes
These are not always easy to prove without records. That’s why documenting your observations right away matters—especially in the weeks after you first noticed the injury.


