In many long-term care settings, families don’t see the problem at first. They notice it later—after a caregiver change, after a resident has been more immobile than usual, or after a shift in how often staff check on the resident.
Common Goldsboro-area scenarios we see in these cases include:
- Missed repositioning during periods of higher workload (weekends, evenings, holidays)
- Delayed response to early skin redness that should have triggered escalation
- Gaps between care plans and what was actually documented in progress notes
- Inconsistent wound monitoring for residents with limited sensation or mobility
Pressure injuries are not “just skin issues.” They can reflect failures in risk assessment, staffing coverage, and follow-through on care plans.


