In many cases we see across Northern California, pressure ulcers don’t appear out of nowhere. They tend to develop when the resident’s risk factors aren’t matched with consistent hands-on care.
In a Dixon-area long-term care setting, common contributing patterns include:
- Missed or rushed repositioning during shift changes
- Inconsistent skin checks after you report redness or soreness
- Delayed wound care escalation once a wound is identified
- Documentation that doesn’t match what families were told
- Care gaps tied to staffing strain (including weekends and holidays)
Because Dixon is a suburban community where families often visit after work and on weekends, timing matters: you may notice changes after hours when staff coverage shifts, and that can become part of the factual record.


