In a skilled nursing or long-term care setting, pressure ulcers are typically linked to preventable issues such as:
- missed or inconsistent skin checks
- inadequate repositioning assistance
- delays in wound evaluation and treatment
- hygiene gaps that worsen skin breakdown
- care plan failures when mobility, nutrition, or incontinence needs change
California residents rely on licensed facilities to meet established standards of care. When a pressure ulcer appears or worsens after admission, it can indicate a breakdown in monitoring and response—not just “aging” or an inevitable medical outcome.


