Many residents in Mentor are cared for during long stretches between family visits—particularly for those who need help with mobility, toileting, or transfers. Pressure ulcers often begin with subtle changes (redness, warmth, skin discoloration) that require timely documentation and response.
In a case review, we frequently see patterns such as:
- turning/repositioning being performed inconsistently but recorded inaccurately
- wound assessments that don’t match what family members observed
- care-plan updates that lag behind the resident’s actual condition
- delays between noticing a problem and ordering/implementing wound care
These issues aren’t “small paperwork problems.” They can be the difference between a treatable sore and a more serious injury.


