Haverstraw is a community where many families rely on nearby long-term care options and visit regularly. When you’re seeing your loved one in person—sometimes after commuting from home, sometimes around busy work schedules—it can feel shocking when staff say, “We noticed it later,” or when the first photos of a wound appear after it has already progressed.
Pressure ulcers aren’t usually a mystery. They typically arise when one or more of these essentials break down:
- Turning and repositioning doesn’t happen often enough (or isn’t documented)
- Skin checks aren’t completed at the right intervals
- A resident who needs hands-on help isn’t getting it consistently
- Moisture management (toileting, incontinence care, hygiene) is delayed
- Nutrition and hydration are not addressed when risk rises
In New York, nursing homes are expected to follow care plans that match a resident’s assessed risk. When they don’t, the injury can become a predictable outcome—not an unavoidable one.


