In day-to-day care, bedsores are usually more than a “skin problem.” They can be a warning sign that a resident wasn’t receiving consistent turning/repositioning, adequate skin monitoring, or timely wound care.
In Daphne, families commonly describe scenarios like:
- A loved one who seemed fine during one visit, then developed redness or open areas soon after—especially when they were less mobile.
- Gaps between staff check-ins during shift changes, when residents may go longer without repositioning.
- Trouble getting clear answers about when a wound was first noticed, what stage it reached, and who authorized treatment.
- Discrepancies between what the facility told family and what the care records later show.
Those details matter because pressure ulcer prevention is not a one-time task—it’s a routine system of assessments, documentation, and intervention.


