Maryland residents and families often move between care settings—home, assisted living, skilled nursing, rehab—sometimes with limited time to coordinate questions. That’s one reason pressure ulcers are so devastating: the injury may be treated more than it’s explained.
In practice, pressure ulcers can worsen when:
- a resident requires frequent repositioning but doesn’t receive it consistently
- skin checks aren’t documented with enough detail to show early warning signs were recognized
- wound care is delayed while staff wait for “orders” or reassessments
- nutrition and hydration concerns aren’t addressed in tandem with wound prevention
When families live in Anne Arundel County and travel to see a loved one on a schedule that changes week to week, gaps in communication can be harder to spot—until the injury is already advanced.


