Pressure ulcers aren’t just “skin irritation.” They can involve deeper tissue damage, infection risk, pain, and longer recovery—especially for residents who are immobile or need frequent assistance.
In real Pascagoula-area cases, families often report similar patterns:
- Short staffing or high staff turnover leading to missed repositioning and delayed response to early redness
- Inconsistent documentation of skin checks and turning schedules
- Gaps between care plan writing and care plan follow-through, particularly when residents’ mobility changes
- Delayed escalation when a wound worsens (for example, when a facility doesn’t promptly move to appropriate wound care)
The practical point: when families live “on the go,” a facility’s failure to follow prevention steps can go unnoticed—until the injury is advanced.


