Pressure ulcers don’t usually appear overnight. They develop when skin is exposed to ongoing pressure, friction, or shearing—most often for residents who can’t reposition themselves due to limited mobility, pain, stroke-related weakness, dementia, or post-surgery recovery.
In real facilities, delays can happen for reasons families can recognize:
- Missed or inconsistent turning/repositioning during long shifts
- Gaps in skin checks or incomplete wound documentation
- Hygiene or moisture control issues that worsen early redness
- Nutrition and hydration shortfalls that slow healing
- Slow escalation when a resident’s condition changes
For many Graham-area families, the first sign is a call from the facility or a sudden update during a visit—when it’s already progressed beyond “early redness.” That’s why timing and records are so important.


