Hanover Park is a suburban community where many families juggle work, school schedules, and commutes—so loved ones may be relying on a facility’s day-to-day systems more than the average person realizes. When those systems fail, pressure ulcers can become a visible consequence of breakdowns that happened behind the scenes.
Common red flags families in the area report include:
- Delayed turning/repositioning after staff were told a resident was at risk
- Inconsistent documentation of skin checks or wound assessments
- Gaps in wound care follow-through (treatment plans not reflected in daily notes)
- Care plan changes that appear on paper but don’t match what families observe
A pressure ulcer isn’t just a medical inconvenience—it can reflect failures related to staffing, training, risk monitoring, nutrition/hydration support, and response to early warning signs.


