Pressure injuries are not just “skin issues.” They can reflect broader breakdowns in daily care—especially when residents need consistent turning, hygiene support, and wound monitoring.
In smaller communities like Lovington, families may encounter common stress points that can delay recognition:
- Care transitions: a resident returns from a hospital or rehab with new mobility limits, but the facility’s prevention plan doesn’t keep up.
- Busy staffing cycles: families report moments when call lights go unanswered longer than expected, or skin checks appear inconsistent.
- Communication gaps: concerns raised by family members don’t always show up clearly in progress notes.
When those patterns exist, a pressure ulcer can worsen quickly—turning an early warning sign into a complication that requires more treatment and higher costs.


