In Alamogordo, families often coordinate care around work schedules, transportation limits, and long distances to medical appointments. That practical reality can make it easier for problems to go unnoticed—especially when a resident’s condition changes gradually.
Pressure ulcers (also called pressure sores) frequently develop when a facility does not consistently follow a resident’s individualized plan for:
- turning/repositioning
- skin checks at the right intervals
- moisture control and hygiene
- wound care escalation when redness or breakdown is first noticed
- nutrition and hydration support
When these steps slip—due to staffing shortages, incomplete documentation, or delayed response to early symptoms—the injury can worsen before anyone outside the facility realizes there’s a serious issue.
Key point: A bedsore is not “just skin.” It can indicate preventable failures in care planning and monitoring.


