In and around Somerset, families often rely on long-term care facilities when mobility, transportation, or caregiving support at home becomes difficult. When a resident can’t reliably reposition themselves, prevention depends on routine: scheduled turning, skin checks, prompt wound response, and adequate assistance with hygiene and mobility.
Bedsores are not just a discomfort problem. They can reflect breakdowns in daily care—such as missed turning schedules, inconsistent assessments, delayed escalation when redness appears, or care plans that aren’t followed the way they were written.
If you’ve seen changes like persistent redness over bony areas, skin discoloration that worsens, foul odor, drainage, or sudden deterioration after a period of “we’ll watch it,” those observations may help anchor a timeline for your case.


