In suburban communities like Westchester, it’s common for residents to experience care interruptions—such as moving from a hospital to a skilled nursing facility, transferring between units, or changing care teams after a rehab stay.
Those transitions can be high-risk moments for pressure injuries when:
- a new facility receives incomplete wound history,
- risk assessments are delayed or repeated too late,
- staff turnover affects how repositioning and skin checks are documented,
- a resident’s mobility plan changes but support does not.
If you saw early redness that didn’t get treated, or you raised concerns and the response felt slow or inconsistent, that matters. Pressure ulcer cases often come down to whether the facility adjusted care promptly when risk increased.


