In nursing facilities across California—including Inglewood—residents are commonly older adults with limited mobility, diabetes, vascular disease, or neurological conditions. Those medical realities can make skin injuries more likely, but they do not eliminate the facility’s responsibility to:
- assess skin risk and document it consistently
- reposition residents on the required schedule
- monitor high-risk areas (heels, sacrum, hips)
- coordinate timely wound care and follow-up
- update care plans when a condition changes
When staff are stretched, documentation is inconsistent, or care plans are not carried out as written, pressure injuries can progress from early redness to deeper tissue damage. In that situation, families often feel a sense of betrayal—especially if they raised concerns and later learned the facility didn’t respond with urgency.


