In a suburban community like Davidson, families may assume care will be consistent because they see staff regularly during visiting hours. But pressure ulcers can develop during overnight shifts, during staffing transitions, or when turning schedules and skin checks aren’t carried out as written.
A pressure ulcer is often more than skin irritation. It can reflect:
- missed repositioning or delayed wound assessment
- inconsistent hygiene and moisture control
- care-plan follow-through problems (especially for residents with limited mobility)
- nutrition and hydration gaps that affect healing
When a facility documents “routine care” but the wound progression suggests otherwise, that discrepancy is often where cases gain traction.


