Louisville is a growing community in the Denver metro, and families here often notice a pattern: consistent care can break down during busy periods—weekends, holidays, staffing shortages, or transitions between shifts. When a resident needs frequent repositioning and skin monitoring, missing even a few turns or delayed checks can be enough to start an injury.
Pressure ulcers don’t develop overnight. They typically follow a chain of events such as:
- turning/repositioning not happening on schedule
- documented skin checks not matching what the resident required
- delayed escalation when redness or “non-blanching” areas appear
- incomplete wound measurements and inconsistent follow-through
Colorado nursing homes are expected to follow accepted standards of care. When families see a sudden change—especially if the resident was doing fine on admission—those timing facts matter.


