Pressure ulcers are not random. They usually reflect a breakdown in prevention—especially when residents have limited mobility, reduced sensation, or medical conditions that require consistent repositioning and skin monitoring.
In Perris and the Inland Empire region, families sometimes notice patterns that can show up in facility documentation:
- Inconsistent turn-and-reposition schedules when staffing is stretched
- Delayed responses after family members report redness, soreness, or moisture-related skin problems
- Care plan updates that lag behind the resident’s changing condition
- Gaps between wound assessments and actual wound care steps
- Weak communication between nursing staff and clinicians about risk level changes
Even if a facility has a written policy, the legal question is whether the resident actually received the level of care that a reasonable facility would provide under similar circumstances.


