San Leandro residents and families may encounter a mix of long-term care environments, from facilities serving predominantly older adults to centers managing higher-acuity residents. In these settings, pressure ulcers can develop when:
- residents spend long stretches in wheelchairs or bed positions without adequate repositioning
- staff are dealing with high workload and documentation falls behind actual care needs
- wound care decisions are delayed after early skin changes appear
- nutrition and hydration needs aren’t coordinated with the care plan
Even when a facility has written procedures, the question in a claim is whether those procedures were followed closely enough for that resident’s risk level.


