Grand Terrace residents are commonly connected to nearby hospitals, rehab units, and long-term care communities across the Inland Empire. That matters because pressure ulcers often start during transitions—when a person is discharged, returned to a facility, or begins a new mobility routine.
A pressure ulcer can be more than a skin issue. It can indicate failures such as:
- turning/repositioning not happening on the care plan schedule
- late or incomplete skin assessments
- hygiene delays that affect skin integrity
- failure to escalate when early redness or drainage appears
- nutrition and hydration not being coordinated with wound needs
In California, nursing facilities are expected to follow established standards of resident care. When they don’t, families may have grounds to pursue accountability for preventable harm.


