Pressure ulcers don’t usually appear overnight. They develop when skin is exposed to sustained pressure, friction, or shearing—especially for residents who are:
- confined to a bed or chair for long stretches
- unable to reposition themselves due to weakness or illness
- experiencing reduced sensation, dehydration, or poor nutrition
- dealing with mobility limits after surgery or during rehab
Many families in Pooler notice changes during or after visits—sometimes when they ask why a resident wasn’t repositioned more often, why redness wasn’t addressed promptly, or why wound care didn’t seem to match what clinicians recommended.
A key point: your case often turns on what the facility knew, when it knew it, and how quickly it responded—not on what you observed in that one moment.


