Pressure ulcers don’t appear out of nowhere. They typically develop when a facility fails to respond to risk—like limited mobility, poor circulation, incontinence, or cognitive impairment that makes repositioning harder.
In practice, families in the Spring Valley area sometimes notice patterns such as:
- Inconsistent updates during evening or weekend visits when staffing coverage changes
- Long gaps between calls back after you report redness, moisture, or a new wound
- Waiting to escalate when a care plan calls for specific repositioning or skin checks
- Documentation that doesn’t match what you observed (or what wound timelines suggest)
Those issues can point to system failures—staffing, training, or care-plan compliance—not just “bad luck.”


