In Minnesota long-term care facilities, pressure ulcers are not usually random. They often develop when residents who are at risk—such as those with limited mobility, cognitive impairment, or difficulty repositioning—do not receive consistent skin checks and timely wound response.
In practical terms, families in the Cambridge area commonly notice patterns tied to daily operations, including:
- Delayed repositioning or missed turning schedules during busy shifts
- Incomplete skin assessments after a resident’s condition changes
- Gaps in wound care follow-through (for example, when early redness is noticed but not escalated)
- Documentation inconsistencies that make it harder to confirm what care was actually delivered
When pressure injuries progress, they can lead to pain, infection risk, extended recovery, and increased dependence—hurting both residents and the family members who are trying to help.


