Pressure ulcers don’t appear out of nowhere. They typically develop when skin and tissue are exposed to sustained pressure, friction, or shearing—especially when a resident can’t reposition independently.
In real Placerville-area scenarios—where many families are also juggling work schedules around commute times on Hwy 50 or trips to appointments—small delays can become big problems. A resident may miss early skin checks, repositioning may be inconsistent, or wound care may be adjusted slower than the care plan required. Facilities sometimes explain the injury as “just part of aging” or “related to existing conditions.”
Our job is to test that explanation against the record: the resident’s baseline status, documentation of risk, and whether staff followed the prevention steps they were obligated to provide.


