Pressure ulcers can develop when a resident’s risk is missed or when prevention steps aren’t carried out consistently. In Parma Heights, where many residents live within close proximity to major health systems and rehabilitation centers, transitions are common—admissions after hospital stays, returns from outpatient procedures, and changes in mobility after illness.
That matters because a resident’s risk can spike after discharge. When care teams fail to re-check skin risk, adjust turning schedules, or update wound monitoring after a change in condition, a sore can begin—and worsen—before families realize it.
Common local warning patterns families describe include:
- A resident who becomes more immobile after a hospitalization and then develops redness that isn’t addressed quickly
- Missed or inconsistent repositioning in long stretches between caregiver check-ins
- Delayed response after staff are told about early symptoms (warmth, discoloration, persistent redness)
- Documentation that doesn’t match what families were told during visits


