Pressure ulcers are typically caused by prolonged pressure, friction, or shearing—especially when a resident can’t reposition independently. In practice, prevention depends on consistent care delivery: turning schedules, skin checks, hygiene support, mobility assistance, and prompt escalation when redness or deterioration appears.
In Millbrae, many families rely on a mix of in-person visits and coordination with clinicians across different settings (facility staff, wound care teams, and sometimes follow-up appointments). That means gaps in communication—missed handoffs, unclear documentation, or inconsistent wound updates—can become part of the problem.
A legal claim often turns on whether the facility responded as a reasonably careful provider would once risk was identified.


