Pressure ulcers typically develop when an at-risk resident spends too long in one position, when skin checks aren’t performed as required, or when early redness isn’t escalated into timely wound care. In practice, families in our area commonly run into patterns like:
- Inconsistent turning/repositioning (missed shifts, unclear schedules, or documentation gaps)
- Delayed response to early skin changes (redness, warmth, non-blanchable areas)
- Care-plan drift when a resident’s mobility or appetite changes after illness
- Handoffs and communication failures between nursing staff and wound care providers
Even when a facility has written policies, what counts is whether those policies were followed for your loved one.


