Pressure ulcers don’t appear out of thin air. They usually reflect a combination of risk factors—reduced mobility, limited sensation, incontinence, and poor nutrition—and whether the nursing home responded with prevention.
In practice, prevention is operational: regular skin checks, repositioning, moisture management, wound monitoring, and timely escalation when redness or breakdown is spotted. When a facility’s routine doesn’t match the resident’s needs, the injury can become more severe before anyone recognizes it.
For Saratoga families, this often shows up in a familiar pattern: paperwork that sounds correct in theory, but gaps in documentation that make it difficult to confirm that prevention happened as required.


