In Southern Arizona, families commonly juggle tight schedules—work, school runs, and travel to appointments. That makes consistent in-facility monitoring even more important, because warning signs can appear between visits.
Pressure ulcers typically develop after prolonged pressure, friction, or shearing—often in residents who:
- Spend long stretches in bed or in a wheelchair
- Have limited ability to reposition themselves
- Experience dehydration, poor appetite, or weight loss
- Have reduced sensation or cognitive impairment
When prevention is working, facilities should document routine skin checks, repositioning assistance, and wound response. When it isn’t, families often notice patterns like delayed attention after redness, missing wound updates, or care plans that don’t match what actually occurred.


