Pressure ulcers typically develop where consistent repositioning, skin checks, and early treatment matter most—areas that can be affected when residents require frequent assistance. In Winnetka-area facilities, families sometimes notice patterns like:
- Repositioning delays after a resident becomes more immobile following illness
- Inconsistent skin assessments when staff turn over or shifts change
- Gaps in documentation between care-plan instructions and what nursing notes reflect
- Delayed wound care escalation when redness or early breakdown appears
Family members often describe a “we asked, but nothing changed” experience—especially when the initial signs seemed minor (redness, warmth, discoloration) and then worsened over days.


