San Diego’s long-term care environment can be demanding: residents often arrive from hospitals after surgery, strokes, or falls; many have limited mobility and changing medical needs. When a person cannot reposition themselves, prevention depends on consistent staffing, documented skin monitoring, and prompt escalation when redness appears.
A pressure ulcer is not “just skin.” It can indicate breakdowns such as:
- Turning/repositioning not happening on schedule
- Delayed response to early redness or skin breakdown
- Gaps between care plans and day-to-day performance
- Infection control problems after wounds form
- Nutrition/hydration support not matching the resident’s risk
When these issues occur, families often notice the problem only after it has progressed—especially when communication is inconsistent or updates are brief.


