In suburban communities like Aliso Viejo, families often commute, manage work schedules, and visit at set times—meaning early skin changes may be noticed later than they should be. Facilities may document routine checks, but families sometimes report gaps like:
- redness that appeared between visits
- concerns raised by family that didn’t seem to trigger timely reassessment
- wound updates that didn’t match what the resident looked like afterward
- inconsistencies between what staff told you and what the chart reflects
When a pressure ulcer is discovered after it has progressed, the case becomes about timing: what risk factors were known, when the injury started (or first showed), and how quickly the facility responded.


