In and around Martinez, many adult children and caregivers commute from nearby Contra Costa communities and may only be present during limited visiting windows—morning shifts, evenings, weekends. That can make it harder to catch early warning signs.
Families commonly report patterns like:
- Skin redness or discoloration that appears between visits and isn’t documented clearly when it first shows up
- Missed or delayed repositioning (especially for residents who are mostly bedbound or have limited mobility)
- Inconsistent wound care updates—the facility may describe “monitoring,” but the record doesn’t reflect frequent skin checks
- Care-plan drift, where the written plan changes or becomes difficult to follow in real time
- Communication gaps, such as staff not relaying wound progression concerns to the care team promptly
These are not “normal” surprises. Pressure ulcer prevention depends on consistent risk assessment, accurate charting, and timely response when skin changes occur.


