Pressure ulcers don’t typically appear out of nowhere. They usually develop when a resident’s risk factors—mobility limits, incontinence, impaired sensation, or the effects of illness—aren’t met with consistent prevention.
In Wayne and surrounding communities, families often tell us the same pattern:
- A new resident arrives after a hospital stay.
- Early weeks involve adjustments to staffing, routines, and care plans.
- Skin changes are noticed later—sometimes after discharge papers or a family request for answers.
When prevention isn’t reliably implemented, a facility may fail in practical ways such as:
- inconsistent turning/repositioning during long shifts
- delayed wound assessment after early redness
- missed hygiene or toileting assistance that increases moisture and skin breakdown
- care plan updates not matching the resident’s changing condition


