Azusa residents regularly rely on nearby long-term care facilities and post-acute services, including skilled nursing and rehabilitation placements that may be part of a broader discharge-and-transfer workflow across the region. That means pressure ulcer prevention depends not only on the facility, but also on how care transitions are handled.
In practice, delays can occur when:
- a resident is moved between units or facilities and risk assessments aren’t updated promptly,
- staffing coverage changes during shift rotations,
- wound care orders aren’t followed consistently after a transfer,
- family concerns are raised but skin checks and repositioning documentation lag behind.
A local attorney can focus on the timeline—what changed, when it changed, and whether the facility met California’s standard of care for prevention and response.


