Bexley is a close-knit, mostly residential community, and many families face a similar reality: they’re balancing work schedules, school pickup, and commuting while also trying to advocate for an aging loved one.
That can matter in pressure ulcer cases because early warning signs are easy to miss when you’re not on-site every shift. Families often report noticing changes only after they’ve progressed—such as redness that doesn’t fade, new drainage, foul odor, or a sudden decline in mobility. By the time a wound looks obvious, the facility’s records may already show long gaps in skin checks, turning assistance, or wound monitoring.
The good news is that a careful review can still highlight what should have happened sooner—especially when the timeline shows a resident arrived without a pressure injury, but developed one after risk factors were present.


