Brentwood is a family-driven, suburban community. Many residents move into long-term care from home expecting consistent routines and attentive supervision. When pressure ulcers develop, families commonly report patterns that sound familiar:
- Staff noticing redness later than expected (rather than documenting early skin changes)
- Missed or unclear turning/repositioning routines during long shifts
- Delayed wound care escalation after the injury appears
- Documentation that doesn’t match what visitors were told—or what they observed
- A decline in mobility and hydration support that wasn’t matched with an updated care plan
If you’ve been told “it’s just part of aging” or “the resident’s condition caused it,” that may or may not be true. In California, the key question is whether the facility provided reasonable pressure-injury prevention based on the resident’s assessed risk.


