Pressure ulcers don’t appear out of nowhere. They typically develop when a resident’s care plan doesn’t match their risk level—or when key prevention steps aren’t carried out consistently.
In Topeka-area facilities, families often report patterns like:
- Missed or delayed repositioning for residents who are chair-bound or bedridden
- Skin checks not happening at the frequency required by the care plan
- Care-plan updates that lag behind changing mobility, nutrition, or medical status
- Wound care orders not implemented promptly after early redness or breakdown
Sometimes the first sign is subtle—redness that doesn’t fade, skin that feels warmer, or a new sore that appears after a period of reduced monitoring. By the time it’s obvious, deeper tissue damage may have begun.


