Camden’s nursing homes serve a diverse urban population, and families often tell the same story: the facility looked fine on paper, but day-to-day care felt uneven—especially when staffing shifts change, residents need frequent repositioning, or communication between nursing staff and wound care providers breaks down.
When a pressure ulcer appears, it can reflect more than skin breakdown. It can suggest:
- turning/repositioning wasn’t done often enough (or wasn’t documented)
- skin checks weren’t completed as required by the resident’s risk level
- hygiene and moisture control were delayed
- nutrition/hydration concerns weren’t escalated when healing slowed
In Camden-area cases, a common turning point is when families notice the ulcer after discharge from a hospital, after a staffing change, or after multiple days of “we’ll keep an eye on it.” That’s why prompt action and evidence preservation matter.


