In long-term care, bedsores aren’t just an unfortunate side effect of aging. They’re commonly tied to breakdowns in day-to-day prevention—things like consistent repositioning, skin checks, moisture control, and timely wound treatment.
In Edgewater-area facilities, families often notice a pattern that looks like this:
- A resident seems fine during one part of the day, then worsens after longer stretches without assistance.
- Family questions are answered verbally (“we’ll keep an eye on it”) but follow-up documentation is unclear.
- A new ulcer appears after a change in mobility after illness, surgery, or hospitalization.
Those details matter because pressure ulcer cases are often about whether reasonable preventive care was delivered—not simply whether a wound occurred.


