Pressure injuries don’t always announce themselves immediately. In day-to-day life around San Ramon—where many adults balance commuting, school schedules, and errands—what often delays recognition is not a lack of love or attention, but missed signals.
Common real-world warning patterns include:
- A resident’s care routine changes (more time in a chair, fewer transfers, or less time out of bed) and skin issues appear soon after.
- Family concerns are acknowledged but not acted on—for example, staff say they’ll “monitor” redness, but the documentation never seems to catch up.
- Discharge and readmission cycles: the facility addresses the wound for a short period, then it worsens later when care is adjusted.
- Gaps in visible communication: you’re told the wound is improving, but wound descriptions, measurements, or photos don’t match what you’re seeing.
These inconsistencies matter legally because they can point to delayed response, incomplete assessments, or failure to follow the resident’s care plan.


