Pressure ulcers don’t always appear suddenly. More often, families see subtle changes first—then the injury becomes harder to reverse.
In many Pinecrest cases we review, warning signs begin with:
- Redness or discoloration that doesn’t improve after staff are notified
- Wounds on the heels, tailbone, hips, or elbows (areas where pressure concentrates)
- Inconsistent updates about skin checks or wound care progress
- A sudden change in mobility (after illness, hospitalization, or a fall) followed by worsening skin integrity
Sometimes the timing lines up with a resident returning from a hospital stay or moving into a higher-acuity phase of care. Families in Pinecrest frequently ask the same question: “Was this preventable, and did the facility respond quickly enough?”


