Hemet is home to a mix of suburban neighborhoods and long commutes to regional medical centers. For many families, that means loved ones may spend extended time in facilities while caregivers juggle travel, work schedules, and appointments.
That reality can make it easier for preventable issues to linger—especially when:
- Residents require frequent repositioning but staffing coverage is inconsistent
- Mobility limitations and incontinence increase risk for skin breakdown
- Skin checks are documented inconsistently or not matched to the resident’s condition
- Families raise concerns, but wound progression continues
In pressure ulcer cases, the facility’s response matters just as much as the injury itself. California law focuses on whether the care provided met the standard expected for a reasonably competent facility—not what’s convenient, not what staff “meant,” and not whether the resident had health risks.


