Pressure ulcers rarely appear out of nowhere. They typically begin with early warning signs such as persistent redness, skin that feels warmer or harder than surrounding areas, or wounds that don’t improve as expected.
Families in the Newark area often describe similar patterns:
- Care changes during busy shifts (weekends, evenings, shift handoffs) when your loved one’s turning schedule may not be consistent.
- Documentation gaps when you request updates and receive summaries that don’t line up with what you observed.
- “We’ll monitor it” responses after you report early symptoms—followed by deterioration.
- Difficult-to-interpret wound descriptions that don’t answer the most important question: Was this preventable, and when did the facility know?
Because families are often commuting—down the Peninsula corridor, toward Silicon Valley, or back home after long workdays—missed opportunities to address early skin changes can become a key issue in a case.


