Monticello residents often juggle full schedules—commuting, seasonal weather changes, and family responsibilities. That matters because pressure-ulcer prevention is detail-heavy and relies on consistent care routines:
- Regular turning and repositioning for residents who can’t do it themselves
- Skin checks that catch early redness before it becomes open wounds
- Prompt wound care and updates to the care plan when risk increases
- Nutrition and hydration monitoring to support healing
When documentation is incomplete or care isn’t followed as written, the injury may appear to “come out of nowhere.” In reality, it often starts earlier—when staff should have noticed risk and acted.


