In the Mount Clemens area, families often describe similar patterns before they learn a pressure ulcer has progressed—especially when residents have mobility limits or require frequent assistance.
Common scenarios include:
- Long stretches with limited repositioning when staffing is tight or shifts change.
- Inconsistent skin checks (for example, documentation that doesn’t match what families see or what the wound care team later reports).
- Delayed specialty wound care after early redness or breakdown appears.
- Care plan updates that lag behind the resident’s condition, so prevention steps don’t keep up with risk.
Michigan nursing homes are expected to follow established care standards for skin integrity—particularly for residents who are bedridden, wheelchair-bound, or at higher risk due to medical conditions.


