In smaller Kansas communities, families frequently know the facility staff personally or see them at community events. That closeness can make it harder to speak up quickly—especially when a facility assures you the skin issue is “just part of aging.”
But pressure ulcers typically develop when prevention steps aren’t consistently followed, such as:
- Regular turning and repositioning for residents who can’t move themselves
- Skin checks at the frequency required by the resident’s risk level
- Prompt wound care when early symptoms appear
- Adequate nutrition and hydration support
- Care plan updates when a resident’s mobility or condition changes
When those steps lag—sometimes because staffing is stretched, shift-to-shift communication breaks down, or documentation is incomplete—pressure can build and tissue can break down.


