While every case is different, families in the Idaho Falls area often describe a similar pattern:
- A “new” wound appears after a period of decline (mobility issues, illness recovery, or medication changes).
- Care notes reference risk factors (limited movement, incontinence, poor sensation), but the wound still develops.
- Family concerns were raised informally—during visits or phone calls—before the injury became documented.
- Wound care timelines don’t match expectations, such as delayed escalation, inconsistent assessment language, or missing repositioning documentation.
Pressure ulcers are not just unpleasant—they’re a sign that a facility may have missed prevention steps such as scheduled repositioning, skin checks, moisture control, and prompt response to early redness.


