In practice, pressure ulcers tend to surface after predictable gaps in care: long stretches without repositioning, delayed response to early redness, incomplete skin checks, or failure to update the care plan when risk changes.
In Madisonville, families often notice this around the same everyday rhythms—after a hospital visit, during transitions from rehab back to a nursing facility, or after staffing changes that affect how often residents receive assistance with turning, toileting, and hygiene. Those routine periods are when prevention should be most consistent.


