Pressure ulcers typically develop when someone is left in the same position too long, when skin checks aren’t done consistently, or when early redness and risk factors aren’t acted on.
In local family conversations, the concerns often sound similar:
- You noticed your loved one sitting or lying in the same areas for long stretches.
- Staff responses seemed reactive instead of preventive (“we’ll watch it” instead of a documented care change).
- Wound care updates didn’t match what you were told day-to-day.
- Your family wasn’t sure who coordinated repositioning, hygiene, nutrition support, and wound treatment.
Even if a facility has policies on paper, pressure ulcers can still occur when staffing levels, shift coverage, documentation practices, or care-plan follow-through break down.


