Kearney is a regional hub in central Nebraska, and many families rely on nearby long-term care facilities for specialized support. In practice, that means:
- Residents may transfer in after hospital stays with limited mobility—making accurate skin-risk assessments critical.
- Care teams often coordinate across multiple clinicians, which increases the importance of consistent documentation and follow-through.
- Families may notice changes during evenings, weekends, or shift handoffs—when communication gaps can delay responses.
A pressure ulcer can develop quickly when repositioning, moisture control, and skin checks aren’t performed on schedule. When the injury worsens, it also becomes harder to reconstruct exactly what happened—so acting early matters.


