Pressure ulcers frequently connect to breaks in routine—especially in facilities that rely on consistent schedules and documentation to manage residents with limited mobility.
In the Troy area, families commonly report concerns tied to:
- Long stretches between check-ins (turning, skin checks, toileting assistance)
- Delayed wound escalation (small redness noted, then no timely treatment)
- Care plan drift (a documented plan exists, but daily notes don’t reflect it)
- Communication gaps between nursing staff and wound/clinical teams
These are not “small” issues. For many residents, bed sores worsen when prevention measures aren’t carried out predictably—especially for people who are bedridden, have difficulty shifting positions, or can’t reliably report discomfort.


