Many residents in Alexandria receive care during structured routines—bathing schedules, repositioning intervals, wound checks, and dietary monitoring. But families often encounter gaps such as:
- Limited communication outside set call windows, making it harder to catch early redness.
- Transfers between units (or between facilities) that can interrupt continuity of skin assessments.
- Short-staffing on weekends or evenings, when fewer staff are available to observe changes.
- Conflicting explanations—for example, being told the injury is “just part of aging” while the record shows risk factors that required active prevention.
A pressure ulcer is not simply a medical inconvenience. In legal terms, it can point to inadequate prevention measures for someone with mobility limits, impaired sensation, or chronic conditions.


