Pressure ulcers often begin subtly—redness over a bony area, a change in skin temperature, or a wound that doesn’t seem to improve. Families commonly report patterns like:
- A resident who is “in bed most of the day” but doesn’t seem to be repositioned on schedule
- Staff changing the subject when you ask about skin checks or turning routines
- Wound care that starts late—or escalates after you repeatedly raise concerns
- Documentation that doesn’t match what you observed during visits
Even when a resident has medical risk factors, pressure ulcers can still be preventable when facilities follow proper monitoring, repositioning, hygiene, and nutrition support.


