In communities across Minnesota, long-term care residents often include people managing diabetes, limited mobility, dementia, or post-surgery recovery. Those conditions increase pressure-ulcer risk—meaning facilities must be extra consistent with prevention.
In practical terms, families in the Brainerd area often report common red flags tied to neglect, such as:
- Turning/repositioning that doesn’t match the care plan
- Delays in responding once redness or skin breakdown appears
- Inconsistent documentation of skin checks and wound progression
- Gaps in hygiene support (toileting, moisture control, cleaning)
- Nutrition concerns that affect healing
Pressure ulcers aren’t “just discomfort.” They can become serious injuries that require ongoing wound care, increase infection risk, and extend recovery.


