Pressure ulcers usually develop when the basics of prevention—regular repositioning, skin checks, moisture management, and prompt wound care—aren’t carried out consistently. That failure can look different depending on the resident’s needs.
In Watervliet and nearby areas, families sometimes describe patterns like:
- Long stretches between turning/skin checks for residents who can’t move themselves
- Inadequate documentation about when repositioning occurred or when redness was first reported
- Delayed wound escalation after early warnings (for example, redness that wasn’t treated as a risk sign)
- Gaps during staffing changes—weekends, nights, or periods when fewer staff are on the floor
Even when a facility has written policies, neglect claims often turn on whether those policies were followed in real life.


