In a smaller community like Plymouth, it’s common for residents and families to interact with multiple caregivers across shifts, and for documentation to be scattered across facility notes, wound care records, and outside visits. That’s not automatically suspicious—care is complicated—but pressure ulcers can develop quickly when even routine steps break down.
Local families often report patterns like:
- Missed or delayed assistance with turning/repositioning during busy shift changes
- Inconsistent skin checks after a resident returns from a hospital visit
- Delayed response after family members report persistent redness or odor
- Care plan updates that don’t match what wound care staff recorded later
When these gaps occur, the key issue becomes whether the facility recognized the risk early and responded appropriately before the injury progressed.


