South Lake Tahoe’s long-term care residents often have complex medical needs, and families may visit around work schedules, weekends, and peak tourism seasons. That timing can create a gap between when warning signs appear and when family members notice them.
Common local scenarios we see include:
- Inconsistent family check-ins during busy months when relatives are commuting or traveling.
- Frequent transfers between care levels (for example, hospital stays) that restart documentation and care plan updates.
- Challenges coordinating with multiple teams—facility staff, wound care providers, and sometimes specialists—after a skin injury is first identified.
When a pressure ulcer appears, the question isn’t simply “how did it happen?” It’s whether the facility recognized risk and used reasonable prevention steps in the time that mattered.


